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Health Agentby Bonis Systems

Health Agent · Your scan report, explained

The radiologist wrote it for your doctor. This page reads it with you.

An MRI, CT, or X-ray comes back with a report written in radiology language — and most people never get a translation. Paste the report here. This page explains every term it recognizes in plain English, shows you a good question to ask your doctor about each one, and lights up where each finding lives on an interactive 3D body — down to the exact vertebra. It explains the report you already have. It never diagnoses, and it never opens or reads scan images.

Runs in your browser Nothing leaves your device Explains the report — never diagnoses Never guesses a meaning

The explainer

Paste the report. See it in plain English — and on the body.

It is read here in your browser and never uploaded. No account, no server, no storage.
No report handy? Try a sample:

In one line

Everything happens in the page you already loaded — no upload, no account, no server call. It only explains terms from a fixed, human-reviewed glossary, so it cannot invent a meaning. And it explains the report your radiologist already wrote — it never diagnoses anything. See the proof →

How it works

A glossary and a map — not a guess, not a diagnosis

A lot of AI tools will happily "read" a medical report by generating plausible-sounding interpretations — and sometimes those are wrong in ways a worried family can't catch. This page works the opposite way. It scans your report for terms in a fixed, human-reviewed glossary and returns only those verified explanations, each one quoted back to the exact sentence in your report it came from. A term it doesn't know is left alone — never given a made-up meaning.

The 3D figure is a body map: when your report says "L4-L5" or "left knee," it lights up where that is, so the words finally have a place. It is not a reconstruction of your scan — this page never opens, reads, or analyzes scan images. Your radiologist did the reading; this page translates the words and shows you where they point.

It explains vocabulary and location. It does not diagnose, does not grade your situation, and does not tell you what to do. "Disc protrusion" is explained as what those words mean — never as a verdict about you. For what any finding means in your specific situation, ask your care team.

Once it makes sense

When the words are clear, you can act on them

Understanding the report is the first step. If other paperwork is the problem, the plain-language decoder handles discharge summaries and lab reports. If insurance denied the scan or the treatment that follows it, decode the denial reason — and if you need the images or report sent to you, the records requester writes the HIPAA request for you.

Questions

Common questions

Does the report I paste get sent anywhere?

No. The matching and the 3D map run entirely in your browser. There is no server endpoint behind this page — what you paste never travels over the network and is not stored. Close the tab and it's gone.

Is this a diagnosis or a second opinion?

No — deliberately. Your radiologist already read the scan and documented the findings; that report is the authoritative source. This page explains what the report's words mean and where they point on the body. It never adds findings, never grades your situation, and never advises. For what anything means for you, ask your care team.

Can it read my MRI or CT images?

No, and it won't. This page works only from the written report — it cannot open scan files at all. Reading the images is the radiologist's job, done under physician licensure. Software that analyzes medical images to inform a diagnosis is regulated as a medical device, and that is exactly the line this page is built to stay behind.

What if a term in my report isn't recognized?

It is skipped — never given an invented meaning. The glossary covers the terms that appear most often in spine, joint, chest, abdomen, and brain reports, and it grows over time. For a term it doesn't cover, ask your care team, or suggest it.

Is the 3D body my scan?

No. It's a map — a standard figure used to show where the report's words point (which vertebra, which side, which organ). Your actual images stay wherever your imaging center stores them; this page never sees them.