Lumbar spine MRIVisual report
A general anatomical model — not your scan. This explains the words a radiologist wrote in a report and shows where they point on a standard body. It never reads scan images and never diagnoses. The report shown here is a sample — not a real patient.
A translucent anatomical body model on a dark background, organs and spine softly visible — a general model, not a patient scan.
The whole picture
A general anatomical model used to show where the report's findings are located. Not a reconstruction of any scan image.

Your report, in plain English

A lower-back MRI, explained term by term.

Each phrase below is lifted from the report and explained plainly — then quoted back to the exact sentence it came from. Scroll, and the body turns to the level being described. Nothing here is a diagnosis.

Tap a word to unpack it

Common lower-back terms, in plain language.

Try another sample

The same page, the same plain-English engine — a different report.

These are explanations of a report — not a diagnosis, not an interpretation, and not the whole record. A finding on a scan is common and often means nothing on its own. Your radiologist and your care team remain the only authority on what any of it means for a real person. If a scan was denied by insurance, Health Agent can decode the denial. To try it on the words of your own report, use Explain my scan report — it reads the text you paste, never an image.