Impression — What It Means on Your Imaging Report
Quick Answer
The Impression is the radiologist's summary at the end of your imaging report — it contains the most important findings and recommendations.
What Is an Impression?
The Impression section is the most important part of your radiology report. It appears at the very end and acts as the radiologist's "bottom line." After reviewing all your images, the radiologist distills their analysis into a few concise sentences that summarize what they found and what they think should happen next.
Think of it like the conclusion of a book report. The body of the radiology report describes every detail the radiologist observed — organ by organ, structure by structure. The Impression skips straight to what matters most. If you only read one part of your imaging report, this is the section to focus on.
The Impression typically includes three things:
- Key findings — the most significant observations from the scan
- The radiologist's interpretation — what they believe those findings mean
- Recommendations — whether you need follow-up imaging, further testing, or no additional action
When You Might See This on Your Report
Every standard radiology report includes an Impression section, regardless of the imaging type:
- X-ray reports — often labeled "Impression" or "Conclusion"
- CT scan reports — may use "Impression" or "Summary"
- MRI reports — typically labeled "Impression"
- Ultrasound reports — sometimes called "Conclusion" or "Assessment"
- Mammogram reports — usually combined with the BI-RADS assessment
The American College of Radiology (ACR) recommends that every radiology report include a clear, concise Impression section. The exact label varies slightly between hospitals and radiologists, but the purpose is always the same.
Should I Be Worried?
The Impression itself is not a cause for worry — it is simply a summary. What matters is the content within it.
If your Impression contains phrases like "unremarkable," "within normal limits," or "no acute findings," those are reassuring terms that mean the radiologist did not see anything concerning.
If the Impression mentions a specific finding and recommends follow-up, that does not necessarily mean something is wrong. Radiologists are trained to be thorough, and follow-up recommendations are often precautionary. For example, a recommendation for a repeat scan in 6 months usually means the radiologist saw something small that is very likely harmless but worth monitoring.
The most helpful thing you can do is bring the report to your ordering physician, who can explain the Impression in the context of your symptoms and medical history.
What Should I Do Next?
- Read the Impression section first when you receive your radiology report — it gives you the radiologist's most important conclusions without needing to understand every technical detail.
- Look for action words such as "recommend," "correlate clinically," or "follow-up" — these tell you whether additional steps are needed.
- Schedule an appointment with the doctor who ordered the scan to discuss the findings. They will combine the imaging results with your clinical history to determine a plan.
- Keep a copy of the report for your personal records. Future radiologists will compare new scans to previous ones, and having your history readily available helps.
- Use ReadingScan to translate complex medical language in the Impression into plain, easy-to-understand terms before your doctor visit.