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GlossaryClinical Indication

Clinical Indication — What It Means on Your Imaging Report

Quick Answer

Clinical indication is the "reason for the exam" section on your imaging report — it tells the radiologist why your doctor ordered the scan.

What Is Clinical Indication?

When your doctor orders an imaging study, they include a brief note explaining why the scan is needed. This note is called the clinical indication (sometimes labeled "Indication," "History," "Reason for Exam," or "Clinical Information"). It usually appears near the very top of your radiology report, before any of the actual findings.

Think of it like the subject line of an email. Before the radiologist opens your images, they read the clinical indication to understand what your doctor is concerned about. This context helps them focus their review. A radiologist reading a chest X-ray for "shortness of breath" will pay special attention to the lungs and heart, while one reading for "rib pain after a fall" will look more carefully at the bones and surrounding soft tissue.

The clinical indication is written by your ordering physician, not by the radiologist. It is typically one to two sentences and may include your symptoms, a suspected diagnosis, or a medical condition being monitored. You might see entries like "chest pain, rule out pneumonia," "history of breast cancer, screening mammogram," or "knee pain after sports injury."

When You Might See This on Your Report

The clinical indication appears on virtually every imaging report, regardless of the type of study:

  • X-ray reports — commonly listed as "Indication" or "Clinical History" at the top of the report
  • CT scan reports — often includes the specific question the doctor wants answered, such as "evaluate for kidney stones"
  • MRI reports — may be more detailed, sometimes including relevant lab results or prior imaging findings
  • Ultrasound reports — typically describes the area of concern and the reason for investigation
  • Mammogram reports — usually states whether this is a routine screening or a diagnostic study prompted by a specific finding

The American College of Radiology (ACR) considers clinical information essential for accurate image interpretation and recommends it be included on every report.

Should I Be Worried?

No — the clinical indication is simply your doctor's description of why the scan was ordered. It is not a diagnosis and does not contain the radiologist's findings.

Patients sometimes read the clinical indication and become anxious because it mentions a concerning possibility, such as "rule out malignancy" or "evaluate for tumor." These phrases can sound alarming, but they are standard medical language that simply means the doctor wants to check whether something is present. "Rule out" is actually a positive phrase in medicine — it means the doctor expects the scan will confirm the problem is not there, but wants imaging to be sure.

Similarly, if your clinical indication mentions a pre-existing condition (like "history of colon cancer"), this does not mean your doctor suspects the cancer has returned. It is providing context so the radiologist knows to look carefully for any changes related to that history.

The findings and impression sections — not the clinical indication — are where you will learn what the radiologist actually observed on your images.

What Should I Do Next?

  1. Check that the clinical indication is accurate. Make sure it reflects the reason you understood for having the scan. If it mentions symptoms you do not have or a condition you were not told about, ask your doctor to clarify.
  2. Skip ahead to the Impression section. The clinical indication sets the stage, but the real conclusions are in the Impression at the bottom of the report.
  3. Understand that medical phrasing can sound scarier than it is. Terms like "rule out," "evaluate for," and "concern for" are routine clinical language used to guide the radiologist — they do not mean something has been found.
  4. Discuss the full report with the doctor who ordered the scan. They wrote the clinical indication and can explain what they were looking for and what the results mean for your care.
  5. Use ReadingScan to translate your report into plain language. It will help you understand not just the clinical indication but every section of your imaging report before your follow-up appointment.

Related Articles

  • How to Read a Radiology Report: Patient Guide
  • How to Read an MRI Scan Report

Related Terms

Impression

The Impression is the radiologist's summary at the end of your imaging report — it contains the most important findings and recommendations.

X-rayCTMRIUltrasoundMammogram

Unremarkable

When a radiology report says 'unremarkable,' it means that area looks completely normal — it is actually good news.

X-rayCTMRIUltrasoundMammogram

Within Normal Limits

Within Normal Limits (WNL) means the finding falls inside the expected range for a healthy person — it is the radiologist's way of saying 'normal.'

X-rayCTMRIUltrasoundMammogram

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Medical Disclaimer

This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical condition or questions about your imaging results.

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