iSLUS in downtown San Diego is the International Society of Liver Ultrasound, a nonprofit medical specialty organization headquartered at 750 Beech Street in the 92101 corridor. The society advances clinical adoption of vibration-controlled transient elastography (VCTE), two-dimensional shear wave elastography (2D SWE), and point-of-care liver ultrasound across gastroenterology, hepatology, and primary care, contributing to the same diagnostic-screening ecosystem that includes San Diego Project Heart Beat's community health initiatives. Research dissemination targets the growing intersection of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), diabetes, and obesity medicine, where early elastography-based fibrosis staging can redirect treatment before progression to cirrhosis. Clinical education programs train primary care physicians and endocrinologists on integrating liver-stiffness measurement into routine metabolic-syndrome workups, a screening protocol increasingly adopted by multi-specialty groups such as Sharp Rees-Stealy Downtown. The society's most technically demanding initiative involves establishing standardized VCTE and shear wave elastography protocols across international clinical sites to enable large-scale longitudinal liver fibrosis surveillance.