Every finding, pinned to where it happened on the body. BETA
Anatomical findings map software from Medrecords AI plots every injury, symptom, diagnosis, and imaging finding on an interactive body map, with laterality shown only when the source states it and every pin linked back to its exact source page or DICOM slice. Live in beta and testable today.
Findings placed where they happened, not just listed.
Every injury, symptom, diagnosis, and imaging finding is plotted on an interactive anatomical map instead of buried in a flat index. Click a pin and it jumps straight to the source page or DICOM slice it came from — the map is a navigation layer over the record, not a new opinion about it.
Laterality only when the record says so.
Left and right are only assigned when a source document actually states the side. When a note describes "the knee" without saying which one, the finding stays on the map as unresolved rather than being quietly assigned to a side for the sake of a tidy visual — the ambiguity is the accurate answer.
If the record doesn't say which side, the map doesn't guess.
Laterality is only ever assigned when a source document states it. A note that says "the knee" without a side stays plotted as an unresolved finding rather than being placed on a silhouette for the sake of a cleaner-looking map — an invented side is worse than an honest gap.
The map also keeps symptom, diagnosis, and imaging finding as three distinct categories rather than one generic pin, and every ambiguous or ambiguously-sided finding stays visibly unresolved until a reviewer looks at the source and makes the call. Audit-grade, source-linked, and never softened for presentation.
From flat list to body map.
Three steps, with an unstated side left visibly unresolved.
Every injury, symptom, diagnosis, and imaging finding is pulled from the record and classified by type.
Findings are pinned to a silhouette with cited laterality where the source states it.
Anything the record doesn't clearly locate stays visibly unresolved for a reviewer's call.
Who reads the body map.
The same findings, viewed by whoever needs to see where they happened.
See every injury pinned to the body before deposing a treating provider on causation.
For law firmsWalk into the exam already knowing what's been found where, and on which side.
For evaluatorsSpot the body systems in play across a claim at a glance, across the whole file.
For TPAsAnatomical findings map, answered.
An interactive body map that plots every injury, symptom, diagnosis, and imaging finding from the record at the location it actually occurred, with laterality shown where the source states it. Click any pin to jump to its exact source page or DICOM slice.
No. Laterality is only assigned when a source document states left, right, or bilateral. If a note just says "the knee" without a side, that finding stays plotted as unresolved rather than being placed on a silhouette by assumption.
Each finding is typed at extraction time based on how the source document frames it — a patient-reported complaint is a symptom, a clinician's conclusion is a diagnosis, and a radiology or DICOM read is an imaging finding. The three types stay visually distinct on the map rather than collapsing into one generic pin.
Yes, in beta. The anatomical findings map is live and testable now; we're refining it hands-on with early customers, and if your use case is a good fit we'll work with you directly.
Yes — every pin links straight back to its source page or DICOM slice, the same citation model used across the rest of the platform.
Related capabilities.
What sits alongside the findings map, live today or in this same beta batch.
ROM figures and pain-scale ratings from every visit, lined up across the file — cited.
ExploreReads the actual DICOM study, not just the radiologist's report — with a built-in PACS viewer.
ExploreEvery condition grouped by body system, with provisional severity and a reviewer's final call.
ExploreSurfaces what the record doesn't document — kept distinct from what it denies.
ExploreSee your findings pinned to the body.
Plot injuries, symptoms, diagnoses, and imaging findings on an interactive anatomical map, with laterality shown only when the record states it. Join the beta on one of your own files, or book a demo first.