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MedLens+

Product

Features

Timelines, per-report reference ranges, cross-lab cautions, and visit briefs — everything MedLens+ does to organize your lab history.

Longitudinal timeline

Plot the same markers across months and years. Every point links back to the PDF it came from.

Ranges from your reports

Flags use the intervals printed on each upload — not generic web tables that may not match your lab.

Cross-lab cautions

Switching from Quest to a hospital lab? We'll flag when methods and ranges might not line up.

Panel completeness

Spot missing markers so you know when a follow-up test might be worth discussing.

Visit brief export

Walk in with a one-page summary of recent shifts and questions tied to your actual reports.

Clear boundaries

We organize and explain. Clinical decisions stay between you and your provider.

One timeline for every visit

Lab results usually arrive as PDFs — email attachments, portal downloads, printouts in a drawer. Over years of care, the collection grows but the story stays fragmented.

MedLens+ pulls structured values from your uploads and places them on a chronological timeline. Select LDL cholesterol and you'll see it went from 118 last March to 142 this November, with each point linked to its source report.

Your lab's ranges, not the internet's

Reference intervals differ by laboratory, method, and sometimes age or sex. A fasting glucose range on one report may not match another facility's printout.

We flag values against the interval on each uploaded document. That respects the context your clinician already works with — and avoids the false alarms that come from comparing against the wrong table.

Smarter comparisons across labs

Comparing TSH from two different labs can mislead when methods differ. MedLens+ shows a caution whenever you're viewing markers across reports from separate providers.

The goal isn't to draw conclusions on your own. It's to arrive with better questions: "I switched labs — can we compare these TSH values reliably?"

Know what's missing

Incomplete panels make trends harder to read. If your lipid profile skipped HDL on one visit, we'll note the gap on your timeline.

Knowing what's absent helps you ask whether a repeat test makes sense — a conversation for you and your clinician, not a recommendation from software.

A brief worth bringing

Before your appointment, export a focused summary: recent changes, flagged values relative to your report ranges, and two or three discussion topics.

Your clinician still interprets results in full context. The brief just means less time scrolling through folders and more time on what matters.

See your reports on a timeline

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