Free, anonymous blood report analysis — AI interpretation in seconds.
Upload your blood test report. Get a plain-language reading of every value, abnormal results flagged, and clear thresholds for when to follow up with a clinician. No account, no email, no upload to any portal that stores it against your name.
Blood tests supported
The AI recognizes standard markers across all common panels and many advanced ones. Upload any of these — the interpretation works the same way.
Complete Blood Count (CBC)
Hemoglobin, white blood cells, platelets, hematocrit. Flags anemia, infection, immune issues.
Comprehensive Metabolic Panel (CMP)
Glucose, electrolytes, kidney markers (BUN, creatinine), liver enzymes (ALT, AST). Whole-body baseline.
Basic Metabolic Panel (BMP)
Glucose, calcium, electrolytes, kidney function. Subset of CMP.
Lipid Panel
Total cholesterol, HDL, LDL, triglycerides. Cardiovascular risk profile.
Thyroid Function (TSH, T3, T4)
Thyroid-stimulating hormone and active thyroid hormones. Flags hypo- or hyperthyroidism.
Liver Function (LFT)
ALT, AST, ALP, bilirubin, albumin. Liver inflammation and function.
Kidney Function (eGFR, BUN, Creatinine)
Glomerular filtration rate + waste markers. Kidney health.
Hemoglobin A1C (HbA1c)
3-month average blood glucose. Diabetes diagnosis and monitoring.
Vitamin D, B12, Iron studies
Vitamin and mineral deficiencies. Often missed by general doctors.
Hormone panels (testosterone, estradiol, cortisol)
Endocrine health, fatigue, mood, reproductive concerns.
Inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR)
Acute inflammation indicators. Used to track infections, autoimmune conditions.
Lipoprotein(a), ApoB, hs-CRP (advanced cardio)
Newer cardiovascular risk markers beyond standard lipid panel.
Why "anonymous" matters for blood tests
Blood test data is among the most sensitive medical data you can share. It signals cholesterol, diabetes risk, kidney function, hormonal status, inflammation, vitamin deficiencies, sometimes more. Once it sits in a database, it has value to insurance underwriters, employers, advertisers, and pharma research programs — often without your direct knowledge.
The standard places people get blood tests interpreted — Quest MyChart, LabCorp Patient, hospital portals, third-party lab apps — all retain your data indefinitely against your identity. That data may be aggregated, sold, used to set insurance rates, or breached. HIPAA covers the largest players, but data sharing within HIPAA-allowed frameworks is broader than most patients realize.
Dr.Khan AI's architecture removes the question entirely: there is no account to tie the data to. The interpretation runs in-memory and is discarded when the session ends. No log of your blood values exists past your browser tab. This is materially different from the alternatives — it is the same kind of interpretation, with none of the data persistence.
How it compares to paid alternatives
For blood report interpretation specifically, the alternatives are:
- Your primary care doctor: Best for context (sees your full history). Slow access (2-4 weeks to follow-up appointment), often costs a copay for the visit, and the explanation is sometimes rushed.
- Lab portals (Quest, LabCorp, MyChart): Show values + reference ranges, sometimes with brief explanations. Tied to your identity. Don't synthesize across markers.
- Telehealth platforms (K Health, Teladoc): Quick clinician access via app. $49+/month subscription or per-visit fees. Account required.
- ChatGPT or other general AI: Will interpret if you paste the values. Requires OpenAI account. Conversation tied to your identity. Not workflow-specific to lab reports.
- Dr.Khan AI (this page): Purpose-built lab interpretation workflow. Free. Anonymous. Sub-second response. Trained on the same medical literature as the clinical alternatives.
For a full pricing comparison across the AI medical category, see how much an AI doctor costs.
Frequently asked questions
What blood tests can Dr.Khan AI analyze?
All common blood tests including CBC (complete blood count), CMP/BMP (metabolic panels), lipid panel, thyroid function (TSH, T3, T4), liver function (LFT), kidney function (eGFR, BUN, creatinine), HbA1c (diabetes), vitamin levels (D, B12, iron studies), hormone panels (testosterone, estradiol, cortisol), and inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR). Advanced cardiovascular markers like lipoprotein(a), ApoB, and hs-CRP are also supported. Upload a photo of the report or paste the values — the AI extracts each measurement, compares to reference ranges, flags abnormal results, and explains what each finding means in plain language.
Is the blood report analysis really free?
Yes. No account, no email, no credit card. Free tier is the whole product — there is no premium "advanced analysis" upsell. The economics work because Dr.Khan AI runs on Llama 3.3 70B served via Groq, which is roughly 8x cheaper per inference than running GPT-4 on standard GPU clouds. The cost per blood report analysis is fractions of a cent. We can sustainably offer it free without ads, referrals, or upgrade prompts. See /ai-doctor-cost for a full pricing comparison across the category.
How do I upload my blood report?
Three options. (1) Take a photo with your phone of the printed report and upload directly — the AI extracts the values via OCR. (2) Upload a PDF of the lab report (most lab portals like LabCorp, Quest, Mayo, or hospital systems let you download a PDF). (3) Paste the test values as text into the chat. All three paths produce the same interpretation. The photo path is the most common — you can do it in 30 seconds with your phone.
Is my blood report stored or shared with anyone?
No. The image or text you upload is processed in memory to generate the interpretation, then discarded when the session ends. Nothing is stored on a server tied to your identity (there is no identity — no account, no email, no signup). The image is not used for AI model training. It is not shared with insurance companies, employers, advertisers, or third parties. Closing the browser tab ends the session and removes any in-memory data. This is materially different from lab portals (Quest MyChart, LabCorp Patient) which retain your data indefinitely against your account.
How accurate is AI blood test interpretation?
For standard blood markers compared against established reference ranges, AI interpretation is highly reliable — the operation is fundamentally pattern-matching against well-documented normal ranges and known clinical correlations. The model Dr.Khan AI uses (Llama 3.3 70B) scores within ~2 percentage points of GPT-4 on the MedQA-USMLE benchmark, meaning its medical reasoning is comparable to a medical resident. Where AI is weaker than a clinician is in synthesizing across your full clinical picture (your history, medications, exam findings). Use the AI interpretation as a starting point for understanding the report; if something is concerning, follow up with a clinician.
What if my blood test shows abnormal results?
The AI flags abnormal values clearly, explains what they typically indicate (e.g., "Elevated ALT suggests possible liver inflammation — common causes include alcohol, fatty liver disease, medications, or viral hepatitis"), and gives clear thresholds for when to follow up with a clinician. For mildly abnormal results that are common (slightly elevated cholesterol, borderline vitamin D), the response includes lifestyle modifications and a typical follow-up timeline. For significantly abnormal results that warrant attention (e.g., kidney function below threshold, high blood glucose suggesting diabetes), the response is direct about the need for clinical follow-up.
Should I trust AI more than my doctor for blood test interpretation?
No — and Dr.Khan AI doesn't suggest you should. The right use case is complementary. Your doctor sees your blood test in context of your full medical history, current medications, physical findings, and ongoing conditions. The AI sees only what is in the report. Use the AI to (1) understand what each value means before you talk to your doctor, (2) prepare questions for your appointment, (3) interpret results in the gap between getting them and seeing your clinician (often days or weeks at most US clinics), (4) get a second perspective if something feels off in how your clinician explained the results.
Can the AI interpret blood reports from any country's lab?
Yes. The AI is trained on medical literature spanning standard international lab reference ranges. Reports from US labs (Quest, LabCorp), European labs (Synevo, Synlab), UK NHS pathology, Indian labs (Thyrocare, Dr. Lal PathLabs, Metropolis), Middle East labs, and others all work. Some markers vary slightly between countries in units (mg/dL vs mmol/L, for example) — the AI handles unit conversion automatically. If a value comes back ambiguous because the country's reference range differs from international norms, the AI flags this and asks.
Analyze your blood report now
No account, no email, no upload that gets stored. Take a photo of the report, get the interpretation in seconds.
Start free analysisRelated guides
- Free Lab Result Analyzer →All lab reports — not just blood. Includes imaging, biopsies, and pathology.
- Understanding Lab Results →Plain-language guide to common test values and what they mean.
- How Much Does an AI Doctor Cost? →Full pricing comparison across 8 services — what is free, what is paid.
- AI Symptom Checker →Free anonymous symptom triage. Pairs naturally with a blood-test follow-up.