Article
How To Describe Thyroid Nodules
Public Sono Ai Report guide about How To Describe Thyroid Nodules, with context, preparation notes, references and safety limits for ultrasound use.
From image to description
A good thyroid report doesn't start with the category: it starts with a consistent description. The category must arise from the text and the images, not from a generic impression. This makes the report more auditable for the physician, clearer for the referring doctor, and less prone to errors when there is assistive AI in the workflow.
Practical description flow
Tabela: Step | How to apply
Essential lexicon
Tabela: Group | What to describe | Practical care
Frequent pitfalls
Useful conclusions
The impression must be short, proportional, and defensible. Avoid turning every finding into an aggressive recommendation, but also do not hide what changes management. When there is a technical limitation, previous biopsy, growth, or suspicious lymph node, say it explicitly.
Tabela: Scenario | Reporting care
Bridge with patients
Patients read reports on portals. A technically correct impression can still cause anxiety if it uses labels without context. Therefore, the sister page explains the thyroid report in simple language and reinforces that the text does not replace a consultation.
Primary sources and support
This page is a writing guide and does not reproduce the original manual. The definitive application of category, follow-up, and FNA must follow the primary source, training, and local protocol.
Application in the Sono ecosystem
In an assisted report, AI should organize what was reported by the physician, not invent findings. Composition, echogenicity, margins, echogenic foci, and category must come from real exam data and medical review.
Need to contact the Sono Ai Report team?
support@sonoaireport.comThis page summarizes operational practices in plain language. It does not replace legal advice, an agreement with your institution or internal medical-record policy.