About

Built for the patient in the waiting room.

Most health information online is either too generic to be useful or too technical to be understood. A patient gets a PSA result, types it into a search engine, and lands on a statistics page written for medical students — or worse, a forum full of anxiety and anecdote. Neither one helps.

UroLens was built to close that gap.

The tools here were created by a fellowship-trained urologist with over six years of clinical practice. Every day in clinic, the same questions come up: What does my number mean for someone like me? What should I expect next? What are my options? Good answers to those questions depend on context — your age, your history, your specific result. A single number without context isn't information; it's just noise.

UroLens gives patients that context. Each tool takes your specific inputs and returns a personalized educational summary — the kind of explanation a specialist would give a well-informed patient, available before you ever walk into an office.

The current tools cover PSA interpretation, blood in the urine, kidney stone prevention, prostate cancer active surveillance, and enlarged prostate symptoms. More are in development, with a focus on the conditions urologists encounter most in practice.

What UroLens is not

UroLens is a health education platform. It does not diagnose, treat, or replace the judgment of a qualified physician. It is designed to make your conversations with your doctor more informed — not to substitute for them.