Radiology Education Hub
Radiology findings explained in plain English
Use this hub to explore common radiology findings by body region, understand how they are phrased in reports, and connect educational content back to the RadDx report interpreter.
Currently linking 21 finding guides plus symptom pages that map to common imaging search intent.
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Understand Your Radiology Report
Paste your radiology report into RadDx and get a calm, plain-English explanation of the report language.
Educational only. RadDx helps explain report wording and does not replace clinician guidance.
Works with CT, MRI, ultrasound, and X-ray reports.
Abdomen findings
Plain-English guides to common abdomen imaging findings, with typical follow-up context and report wording examples.
Adrenal Adenoma
An adrenal adenoma is a usually benign adrenal gland nodule often found incidentally.
Diverticulosis
Diverticulosis means small pouches are present in the colon wall, often found incidentally on abdominal imaging.
Gallstones
Gallstones are solid deposits in the gallbladder seen on imaging.
Hepatic Steatosis
Hepatic steatosis means fat was seen in the liver on imaging.
Kidney Cyst
A kidney cyst is a fluid-filled sac in the kidney, often found incidentally.
Liver Lesion
Liver lesion is a broad term for a focal area in the liver that looks different from surrounding tissue.
Pancreatic Cyst
A pancreatic cyst is a fluid-containing lesion in the pancreas seen on imaging.
Renal Mass
A renal mass is a focal area in the kidney that looks different from surrounding tissue on imaging.
Splenomegaly
Splenomegaly means the spleen is enlarged on imaging.
Brain findings
Plain-English guides to common brain imaging findings, with typical follow-up context and report wording examples.
Chest findings
Plain-English guides to common chest imaging findings, with typical follow-up context and report wording examples.
Ground-Glass Opacity
Ground-glass opacity is a hazy area in the lung seen on CT that does not fully hide the lung structures underneath.
Hiatal Hernia
Hiatal hernia means part of the stomach extends upward through the diaphragm.
Lung Nodule
A lung nodule is a small spot in the lung, often found incidentally on chest CT.
Lung Opacity
Lung opacity is a broad radiology term for an area of increased density in the lung on imaging.
Pulmonary Embolism
Pulmonary embolism means a blood clot is seen in the arteries of the lungs.
Neck findings
Plain-English guides to common neck imaging findings, with typical follow-up context and report wording examples.
Pelvis findings
Plain-English guides to common pelvis imaging findings, with typical follow-up context and report wording examples.
Spine findings
Plain-English guides to common spine imaging findings, with typical follow-up context and report wording examples.
Degenerative Disc Disease
Degenerative disc disease means the spinal discs show age-related wear or dehydration on imaging.
Disc Bulge
Disc bulge means a spinal disc extends beyond its usual margin in a broad, generalized way.
Disc Herniation
Disc herniation means part of a spinal disc is bulging or displaced beyond its usual space.
Spinal Stenosis
Spinal stenosis means the spinal canal is narrower than expected on imaging.
Symptom guides connected to imaging
These pages target common symptom searches and link those questions back to imaging findings and report interpretation.
Chest Pain When Breathing: Why Imaging Might Be Used
Chest pain that worsens with breathing can raise concern for pleural irritation, lung-base inflammation, pulmonary embolism, or chest wall causes. Imaging helps narrow the possibilities when symptoms are concerning.
Flank Pain: Imaging Findings Doctors May Look For
Flank pain can reflect kidney, ureter, musculoskeletal, or referred abdominal causes. Imaging is used when stone disease, obstruction, infection, or another structural issue is suspected.
Left Rib Pain: Why Imaging May Be Ordered
Left rib pain can reflect chest wall strain, pleural irritation, lower lung findings, or upper abdominal structures near the rib cage. Imaging helps when symptoms do not fit a simple strain pattern.
Lower Back Pain: What Spine Imaging Findings May Mean
Lower back pain is common, and imaging findings often reflect degenerative or disc-related changes. Doctors order imaging selectively based on symptoms, neurologic signs, duration, and red-flag features.
Neck Pain: Cervical Spine Imaging Findings in Plain English
Neck pain can be muscular, degenerative, disc-related, or less commonly due to other structural causes. Imaging is usually reserved for persistent symptoms, neurologic findings, trauma, or red flags.
Pain Under the Left Rib: What Imaging Sometimes Looks For
Pain under the left rib can overlap with stomach, spleen, pancreas, lung-base, and chest wall causes. Imaging may help when symptoms persist or the clinical picture is unclear.
Pain Under the Right Rib: Imaging-Related Causes Doctors May Consider
Pain under the right rib can come from the gallbladder, liver, chest wall, lung, or nearby abdominal structures. Imaging is used to clarify cause when symptoms, exam findings, or lab tests raise concern.
Pelvic Pain: Imaging Findings That May Show Up on Reports
Pelvic pain can overlap with gynecologic, urinary, gastrointestinal, and musculoskeletal causes. Imaging helps when clinicians need structural clues from pelvic ultrasound, CT, or MRI.
How to use this hub
- Start with a finding page if your radiology report already uses a specific term.
- Start with a symptom page if you are searching before imaging or trying to understand why a test was ordered.
- Use the RadDx tool when you want a plain-language explanation of your own report wording.
Important Notice
Educational use only. RadDx does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or clinician supervision.
Not for emergencies. If you may have a medical emergency, call 911 or seek immediate care.
Do not submit names, dates of birth, phone numbers, MRNs, addresses, or other identifying health information.