Rapid Anatomy + Reporting Assistant for Radiologists

Label. Highlight.
Explain. Correlate.

The tool that turns a click on a CT or MRI into a full clinical analysis — anatomy, pathology, imaging appearance, common misses, and a ready-to-edit report line.

Built for radiologists who don't pay for basics. Built for those who need to avoid missing things.

Not an anatomy identifier. A daily-use clinical tool.

Not just anatomy labels — full clinical context per structure
Actively detects visible abnormalities in the image
Mistake-based learning: common misses + trap cases
Auto-generates structured radiology reports
Gamified training mode for daily practice
FRCR-style challenges for exam preparation

Everything in one system

Anatomy identifier + Case-based learning + Reporting templates = A tool you open every day.

Core

Anatomy + Pathology Engine

Click any point on a CT or MRI image. Get normal anatomy, common pathologies, imaging appearance, and a sample report line — all in one click.

High-yield

Mistake-Based Learning

"Common misses", "Trap cases", and a sign-off checklist for every structure. Train your eye to catch what others miss before you sign off.

Reporting

Auto-Report Generator

Build a structured radiology report from your identified structures in one click. Normal findings auto-fill; abnormal findings get professional placeholders.

Daily use

Training Mode

Anatomy sprints, spot-the-abnormal, and FRCR-style challenges. Timed, scored, and gamified to build speed and clinical instinct.

Learning

Quiz Mode

Curated multiple-choice and click-to-identify quizzes. Track your accuracy over time and focus on your weak areas.

Roles

Role-Based Access

Tailored dashboards for Students, Residents, and Attending Physicians — each with appropriate tools, permissions, and clinical depth.

Start free. Upgrade when it pays for itself.

5 free AI identifications every month. Upgrade to Resident Pro for unlimited access, full pathology engine, clinical insights, and auto-report generation.

For educational purposes only. Not a substitute for clinical judgment.