Upload an X-ray. Get fast analysis.
Upload an X-ray image for a structured educational walkthrough, then use the site’s finding guides and public reference examples to make sense of common report language in plain English.
Built for the gap between a radiology report and a real explanation
Most people do not search for chest X-rays because they want a textbook. They search because they have a report phrase they do not understand, an image they want to compare, or a visible finding they want explained before or alongside proper clinical follow-up. Xray Reference is built for that gap: practical, plain-language educational help without pretending to be a diagnosis service.
What you can actually do here
Use the upload flow when you want a structured educational read-through of visible patterns and likely report wording.
Use the finding guides for questions like cardiomegaly, pleural effusion, lung opacity, pneumothorax, or “normal vs abnormal chest X-ray.”
Use the reference library to connect what you are seeing with NIH-derived examples and related explanatory pages.
Good places to start
How to use the site responsibly
- Xray Reference is for education and interpretation help, not diagnosis, treatment, or emergency decision-making.
- The site uses public NIH-derived reference material and site-authored explainers to make common X-ray language easier to understand.
- If you upload an image, remove names and other identifiers first, and use the result as a learning aid rather than a substitute for clinician review.