RadHint

About RadHint

RadHint answers a question every radiology resident faces at the workstation: for this organ, this condition, and this modality, what do I actually need to put in the report — and which score applies and how do I calculate it? It currently covers 19 reporting workflows and 28 calculators.

Each workflow leads with who it applies to, then a structured “what to report” checklist, the relevant scoring systems as interactive calculators, the resulting category and management recommendation, and a copyable report snippet — backed by citations to the original guideline.

How the content is maintained

All content lives in the repository as typed data, validated at build time. Every calculator’s logic is a pure, unit-tested function checked against worked examples from the source guideline; cross-references between workflows and calculators are enforced by tests. Nothing is fetched at runtime.

Guideline versions

Reporting and data systems are revised over time. RadHint states the exact version on every page (for example, ACR TI-RADS 2017, LI-RADS v2018, O-RADS US v2022) and never implies a “latest” version. When a guideline updates, the version and content are updated together.

Names & attribution

Reporting-and-data-system names such as TI-RADS, LI-RADS, O-RADS, and PI-RADS are trademarks of the American College of Radiology and are used here nominatively, with attribution, to identify the systems they name. Criteria are re-expressed from the published methods and cited; no copyrighted tables or figures are reproduced. Before any public or commercial deployment, obtain the appropriate permissions from the ACR and other rights holders.

Disclaimer

RadHint is an educational reference for trained clinicians. It does not provide medical advice, make diagnoses, or replace clinical judgment. Every measurement, score, and recommendation must be verified against the cited original guideline before it informs patient care. The authors accept no liability for decisions made using this tool.