Real cases from the founder’s family, published with consent. Every finding was verified with a treating physician.
A · The founder · 40
Ratios between values
CROSS-VALUE
A year of recurring fainting. Three physicians, and every test in the normal range — normal glucose, normal insulin. The system computed the ratio between the two (HOMA-IR) — a calculation no one had performed — and the ratio was out of range. The direction it raised: reactive hypoglycemia. A glucose-tolerance test confirmed it; a dietary change stopped the fainting.
B · The founder’s mother · 66
Data that never crossed institutions
CROSS-INSTITUTION
A CT summarized as “normal.” In the body of the report — not in the summary — was evidence of old lacunar infarcts: an elevated stroke risk requiring preventive treatment. The finding never reached her family physician. Four years later the system read the full report and surfaced the line. Preventive treatment began within a week.
C · The founder’s father · 68
Default attribution
DEFAULT ATTRIBUTION
Numbness in the legs was attributed to diabetes, and the prescribed treatment addressed the symptom. The system cross-checked: the diabetes was well controlled, with no other complications — and raised another common cause at that age: B12 deficiency. Testing found a significant deficiency. With supplements — meaningful relief within two months.
D · The founder’s sister · 40
A trend inside the normal range
LONGITUDINAL
Years of pain without a diagnosis. A rheumatologic marker that always stayed “in range” — but climbed steadily, ten years in a row. The system flagged the trend and prompted a repeat test; the value crossed the range, and the finding helped the rheumatologist reach a diagnosis.