Flag, prioritize, draft, then you sign
AI in radiology that reads alongside you
Radiological.ai flags suspected findings for review, pushes urgent studies to the top of the worklist, and drafts the structured report before you sit down, across X-ray, CT and MRI. Here is exactly how the assistant supports each read, from the worklist to your signature.
Radiological.ai is a workflow and decision-support tool for qualified clinicians. It does not provide a diagnosis and is not a substitute for professional medical judgment. Final interpretation always rests with the responsible radiologist.
The read, end to end
How AI in radiology fits the read: flag, prioritize, draft, sign
No new pane to babysit and no diagnosis handed down. The assistant does the surfacing, the sorting and the drafting; the radiologist makes every call and signs every study.
01 / FLAG
Flag suspected findings
A second set of eyes on every study. On X-ray, CT and MRI, the assistant surfaces regions of interest with a reticle and a short note, flagged for your review. It highlights what may warrant a closer look. It does not diagnose, confirm or rule anything out.
02 / PRIORITIZE
Prioritize the worklist
Studies flagged as suspected-critical move toward the top of your worklist, so a suspected bleed or PE is not waiting behind routine follow-ups. Urgent reads surface first, and fewer studies sit in the queue.
03 / DRAFT
Draft the structured report
A structured report draft arrives pre-populated in your template, with Exam, Technique, Comparison, Findings and Impression. Measurements and boilerplate are filled in, so you start from an editable draft instead of a blank page.
04 / REVIEW & SIGN
Review and sign
You review the flags and the draft, edit anything, and sign. Nothing is final until the radiologist signs it. The assistant accelerates the read; the responsible radiologist owns the interpretation.
See it for yourself
Watch the assistant read a sample study
This is an illustrative sample, not a real patient study and not a diagnosis. Run it and watch the worklist re-prioritize, a region of interest get flagged for review, and a structured report draft build line by line, ready for the radiologist to edit and sign.
- The worklist re-sorts so a suspected-critical study surfaces first
- A reticle flags a region of interest for the radiologist to review
- A structured report drafts in your template, marked DRAFT until you sign
- Every study ends the same way: the radiologist reviews and signs
Worklist
Structured report
DraftRun the assistant to draft this report for review.
Illustrative sample · not a real patient study, not a diagnosis
Decision support for qualified clinicians. Radiological.ai does not provide a diagnosis and is not a substitute for professional judgment.
Across the studies you read
One assistant across X-ray, CT and MRI
The same flag, prioritize and draft flow runs across the modalities a general or subspecialty list mixes through in a shift, so you are not switching tools by study type.
X-ray (CXR and beyond)
High-volume plain film moves fast. The assistant surfaces regions of interest on chest and other radiographs and drafts the report, so routine films clear quickly and anything flagged gets your eyes sooner.
CT
From CT head to CT chest PE-protocol and abdomen, suspected-critical studies are pushed up the worklist and the structured draft is waiting, so the urgent ones do not sit behind routine follow-ups.
MRI
On longer MRI reads, the draft arrives pre-populated in your template with the sections and measurements scaffolded, so you spend your time on judgment rather than transcription.
What it is, and is not
The questions every radiologist asks first
Is the assistant making the diagnosis?
No. Radiological.ai is decision support. It flags suspected findings, prioritizes the worklist and drafts the report to save you time. You review, edit and sign every study. It is not a substitute for professional medical judgment.
Does the radiologist still sign every study?
Always. Nothing is final until the responsible radiologist signs it. The draft is marked DRAFT, the sign-off is yours, and the interpretation rests with you.
Which modalities does it cover?
X-ray, CT and MRI across common study types. The same flag, prioritize and draft flow runs across all three, with coverage scoped per plan.
Are the flags graded for accuracy?
We speak to workflow, not diagnostic performance. The flags are a second set of eyes and the draft is a starting point. The radiologist decides what is clinically significant and what goes in the final report.
Does it fit our reading workflow and templates?
It is designed to fit your reading workflow and your report templates. We scope modalities, templates and how it sits alongside your stack with your group during onboarding.
Read more per shift, with the urgent studies first
Bring the flag, prioritize and draft flow to your group's worklist, across X-ray, CT and MRI. You review and sign every study.
Decision support, not a diagnosis · X-ray, CT & MRI · The radiologist always signs