Read the report
Extract analytes, values, units, ranges, and status from supported PDFs or images.
Use Case
Turn hard-to-read laboratory reports into reviewed values, understandable context, and a useful history over time.
The opportunity
A laboratory report often arrives as a dense PDF full of abbreviations, reference ranges, and isolated flags. The result may be technically available but still difficult for the person receiving it to use.
Lunas turns that document into a review process. Stethos can extract structured values, the user confirms or corrects them, and the accepted measurements can become part of a longitudinal record. Explanations keep the test, unit, reference range, surrounding context, and uncertainty together.
Where Lunas fits
Stethos helps explain, organize, and investigate. People and qualified professionals stay responsible for the decisions that follow.
Extract analytes, values, units, ranges, and status from supported PDFs or images.
Ask the user to review extracted values instead of silently treating OCR as truth.
Describe what a measurement commonly reflects and which context may change its meaning.
Compare repeat measurements so a change is not hidden in separate portal downloads.
A practical workflow
A repeatable path makes the model easier to supervise and the result easier to trust.
Add a supported laboratory PDF or image from an eligible plan.
Confirm or correct the extracted test name, value, unit, range, and date.
Ask Stethos about terminology, patterns, limitations, and useful questions.
Use charts and a professional conversation to understand the result in context.
Product path
Lunas.One is available to individuals today. Team & Enterprise workspaces and a governed Stethos API are in active development — the roadmap below is directional, not a promise of present availability, and larger deployments will require the right privacy, security, evaluation, and human-review controls.
Available in Lunas
Team, Enterprise & API direction
Questions
PDFs and images can be misread. Confirmation keeps an OCR or formatting error from silently becoming part of the health record.
Not by itself. Reference ranges vary and a result depends on clinical context, trends, collection conditions, and other information.
It can chart measurements that can be normalized to the same analyte, while keeping units and source context visible. A professional should review differences in method or reference range.
Try the product
Use Lunas for information and organization, then involve a qualified professional whenever a health decision is needed.