Bionic Flow collapses every step between your voice and the PACS, with clinical AI algorithms that audit the findings themselves, not just the transcription.
Okay, CT chest with contrast. Uh, fifty-eight year old female. Persistent cough, six weeks. Former smoker, twenty pack-years. Rule out malignancy. So, solid nodule, right upper lobe, anterior segment. Um, Measuring eight point two millimeters. Spiculated margins. Compare prior June 2025 was five millimeters. Mediastinum and hila clear. Right, Impression: growing spiculated RUL nodule. Lung-RADS four B. Recommend PET-CT and multidisciplinary review.
58F. Persistent cough, 6 weeks. Former smoker, 20 pack-years. Rule out malignancy.
Axial CT of the chest with IV contrast. 1.25 mm slice thickness. Coronal and sagittal reformats.
Solid nodule in the anterior segment of the right upper lobe, measuring 8.2 mm. Spiculated margins. Increased from 5 mm on prior CT (June 2025).
No lymphadenopathy. No effusion.
Unremarkable.
Growing spiculated RUL nodule. Recommend PET-CT and multidisciplinary review.LUNG-RADS 4B
Dictate the way you already talk. Fragments, hesitation, medical shorthand, a regional accent.
No voice enrollment. No profile training. It even works for the new locum on their first shift.
Clinical AI algorithms go over every finding with your dictation in hand. They help catch the missed measurement, the flipped laterality or any other slipped detail.
Your phrases then land in the templates and macros you already use, so the draft comes back in your format, not a generic one.
One click copies the validated draft to your clipboard. Paste it into your existing RIS or PACS and you are done.
If you're on our RIS, the report is generated in the main editor itself.
Every feature earned its place after surviving a 60-study night shift.
Trained on millions of dictations across 23 subspecialties. Handles accents, anatomy, and measurement phrasing without cold-start or voice enrollment.
Not a general-purpose LLM. Purpose-built clinical models audit every statement against your dictation, checking laterality, negation, measurements, and consistency. Conflicts flag before you sign, and nothing enters the report that you didn't say.
Phrases route into the templates you upload at setup, with awareness of each physician's macros and preferences. The structure each radiologist prefers, every time. No re-authoring. No generic defaults.
No integration project. No HL7 plumbing to argue about. Copy the validated draft, paste it into whatever RIS or PACS you already run, move to the next case. The deployment meeting is 20 minutes long.
No PHI required. Skip the 6-month compliance review and BAA war. Starts tomorrow, not next year.
Flag, time-stamp, and escalate critical results. Acknowledgement tracked to the second.
Patient history, consolidated and contextualised in the drafting and validation of the report. No clicking through five tabs to find what you need.
On our RIS, prior reports are parsed automatically. Size deltas, interval changes, and classification drift surface in the draft without you pulling anything up.
Bionic Flow is a listening pill, not another reading workstation. Keep it on one monitor as an overlay, or split it to a second screen. Your DICOM viewer, worklist, and RIS stay untouched.
Zero PACS integration. No HL7 plumbing. No identifiers leave your network, just the dictation audio.
The incumbents transcribe what you said. Bionic Flow delivers what you meant: a structured, validated draft ready to sign. Same dictation, different category of output.
General-purpose LLMs invent irrelevant information.
For a radiology report, that is malpractice. Bionic Flow's architecture is built to ensure nothing appears in your report that you didn't say.
General-purpose LLMs invent irrelevant information.
For a radiology report, that is malpractice. Bionic Flow's architecture is built to ensure nothing appears in your report that you didn't say.
Radiology is the highest-burnout specialty in medicine. The reasons are structural: isolation, volume pressure, and tools that punish.
The hours we return aren't for more reads. They're for the drive home, dinner, and life. What radiologists do with them is their business.
Give your radiologists their evenings back.
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