A New Tool for a Common Problem
Imagine sitting in a hospital room, waiting for news about your heart scan. The doctor is busy, and the results take time. Now, imagine an AI system that looks at your heart scan and writes a detailed report in minutes.
This is what a new study is testing. Researchers built an AI tool that can read coronary angiograms—scans that show blockages in the heart’s arteries. The goal is to help doctors make faster decisions.
Coronary artery disease is a leading cause of death worldwide. Doctors often use angiograms to see how bad the blockages are. But reading these scans takes time and skill. In busy hospitals or remote areas, there may not be enough experts to read them quickly.
This delay can mean waiting days for results. That’s stressful for patients and can slow down treatment. An AI tool that reads scans and writes reports could help speed things up.
The Old Way vs. The New Way
Traditionally, doctors or trained technicians look at each scan frame by frame. They measure the blockages and write a report by hand. This process is accurate but slow.
But here’s the twist: AI can now look at thousands of scan images in seconds. The new tool doesn’t just spot blockages—it also labels the arteries and writes a full report. This could save time and reduce errors.
Think of the AI as a smart assistant for doctors. It uses a “vision-language model,” which means it can see images and understand language. It’s like a translator that turns pictures into words.
The AI was trained on 20,000 scan images from nearly 2,000 patients. It learned to spot blockages, label the arteries, and write a report. The system uses a technique called “low-rank adaptor weights,” which is like adding a small upgrade to a computer program instead of building a new one from scratch.
Researchers tested the AI on scan images from four different datasets. They checked how well it detected blockages, labeled arteries, and wrote reports. The study was published on medRxiv in April 2026.
The AI detected blockages with 60% accuracy. For labeling arteries, it was about 46% accurate. When writing reports, it was 42% accurate.
These numbers may seem low, but they are a start. The AI was better at spotting major blockages and major arteries. For example, it was more accurate with the left anterior descending artery—a key artery in the heart.
But here’s the catch: human doctors are still more accurate. The AI is not ready to replace them. Instead, it could act as a helper, flagging issues for doctors to review.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
Researchers say this AI tool could be useful in places with few specialists. It could also help doctors double-check their work or audit whether a heart procedure was needed. But they stress that more testing is needed before it can be used in real hospitals.
This AI tool is still in the research phase. It’s not available in hospitals yet. If you’re waiting for a heart scan result, talk to your doctor about the process. They can explain how long it takes and what to expect.
The study has some weaknesses. The AI was tested on a limited set of images, and its accuracy is not yet at human levels. It may also struggle with unusual cases or low-quality scans. More research is needed to improve its performance.
Next, researchers plan to test the AI in real hospitals. They will also work on making it more accurate and reliable. If successful, this tool could be available in clinics within a few years. For now, it’s a promising step toward faster, more efficient heart care.