Subspecialty routing
A brain MRI gets a neuroradiologist; a knee MRI gets an MSK reader. We don't route to generalists.
Your scan reviewed by a board-certified, subspecialty-matched radiologist. Independent second opinion in 24–48 hours. Starting from $50 — no subscription, no insurance, pay only when you submit.
The diagnostic gap is real and global. A second opinion is the most reliable way to close it.
Founded by working radiologists. Every part of the workflow — from upload to signed report — was designed by people who read scans for a living.
A brain MRI gets a neuroradiologist; a knee MRI gets an MSK reader. We don't route to generalists.
Median turnaround beats the 6–8 week specialist wait by orders of magnitude. Urgent cases can be expedited.
Partner AI systems pre-flag candidate findings. The signing radiologist verifies each one — AI augments, never replaces.
From DICOM upload to a signed, plain-language report — with one or two days of work happening on our side.
DICOM, JPEG, or a portal link. Add the prior report if you have one.
Routed to the right reader — neuroradiologist, MSK, body, breast, cardiac, etc.
Partner AI surfaces candidate findings; the radiologist verifies, edits, and signs.
You receive a structured report you can show your primary doctor, and an optional follow-up call.
Structured. Signed. The same format your clinician already reads — with every key finding called out plainly.
8 mm solid nodule, left upper lobe. Spiculated margins with pleural retraction.
Suspicious · PET-CTNo mediastinal or hilar lymphadenopathy. No pleural effusion.
AI-flagged · confirmed
CT slice: Snoeckx et al., CC BY 4.0 · Wikimedia Commons
Any modality your hospital can export — including DICOM, JPEG, and PDF reports.
A look at the board-certified radiologists who actually review your case. Browse the full directory or jump straight to a profile.
All radiologistsWe integrate proven AI systems under expert supervision — no opaque black boxes.
From London to Berlin, Bangalore to Dubai, across Australia and New Zealand — patients use DocOrbit when the clock is running and the diagnosis still isn't clear.
See us on TrustpilotIf your modality or workflow isn't covered here, open a chat — a radiologist on our team will reply.
MRI, CT, X-ray, ultrasound (USG), PET-CT, mammography, and DEXA. Upload DICOM directly or share images via a link from your hospital's portal.
Before the specialist reviews your case, we route the imaging through partner AI systems (Floy, Hevi AI, Autoderm) which surface candidate findings. The board-certified radiologist then verifies, accepts, or rejects each finding and signs the final report.
Most radiology reports come back in 24–48 hours. Urgent cases — for example oncology staging or stroke workup — can be expedited by request.
Yes. All DICOM transfers are encrypted in transit and at rest. Access is scoped to the assigned subspecialist; the data is never used to train AI models. See our Privacy Policy for full details.
Absolutely. Share the original report alongside the imaging. The DocOrbit radiologist will write an independent read and explicitly note where they agree or disagree with the prior interpretation.
Plain-English explainers on the imaging findings patients ask about most — written and reviewed by our specialists.
All articles
Seeing the words "ovarian cyst" on an ultrasound report can be unsettling. The reassuring truth is that ovarian cysts are one of the most common findings in women of reproductive age, and the large majority are completely harmless — fluid-filled sacs that come and go with the menstrual cycle.
If a CT or MRI report mentions "mucosal thickening" of the paranasal sinuses, it is one of the most common phrases head imaging ever produces — and on its own, it is rarely something to worry about. It usually means the soft tissue lining your sinuses looks a little swollen, often from something as ordinary as a recent cold or seasonal allergies.
Few things are as unsettling as a report line that mentions a "nodule" on your lung. If a recent CT scan found a lung nodule, take a breath first: the large majority of lung nodules are not cancer. They are one of the most common incidental findings in chest imaging, and most turn out to be old infections, scar tissue, or benign growths.
Most reports back in 24–48 hours. Starting from $50 — no subscription, no insurance hoops.