Multi-Model Clinical Review

Case: Case #28 | Patient: Minty | Created: 11/06/2026 22:13
Clinical caution: This is not a diagnosis. It is a multi-model reasoning overlay for veterinarian review.

Conventional Veterinary Model

  • Likely Differentials: None can be reasonably proposed due to absence of positive RAC markers, imaging, or pathology data. - Serious Rule-Outs: No evidence currently to support or exclude serious conditions such as neoplasia, severe infection, or organ failure. These remain theoretical concerns given the species and breed but lack supporting data. - Missing Tests: Comprehensive diagnostic workup is needed including: • Complete blood count and biochemistry panel to assess systemic health and organ function • Urinalysis to evaluate renal and urinary tract status • Imaging studies (thoracic and abdominal radiographs, ultrasound) to detect structural abnormalities • Specific tests based on clinical signs once available (e.g., infectious disease titers, endocrine panels) - Monitoring Markers: Pending establishment of baseline clinical and laboratory data, monitoring should include weight, BCS, hydration status, and any emerging clinical signs.

Traditional Chinese Medicine Model

  • Possible Patterns: No clinical or diagnostic data to support identification of Qi deficiency, Blood deficiency or stasis, Yin/Yang imbalance, Damp, Heat, Cold, or Phlegm patterns. Channel involvement and Five Element themes cannot be assessed without symptomatology or tongue/pulse findings. - Food Energetics: No dietary information provided to correlate with TCM food energetics or to suggest dietary modification.

Homeopathic Model

  • Remedy-Picture Themes: No characteristic symptoms or modalities documented to suggest remedy pictures or constitutional types. - Constitutional Observations: Absent; no behavioral, emotional, or physical traits recorded. - Missing Characteristic Symptoms: Modalities (aggravations and ameliorations), detailed symptom descriptions, and mental/emotional state are needed to guide homeopathic reasoning.

Anthroposophic Model

  • Nerve-Sense, Rhythmic, Metabolic-Limb Systems: Insufficient data to interpret involvement of these systems. - Life Process and Organ-Process Themes: No clinical or diagnostic evidence to suggest disturbance in organ processes or life rhythms. - Certainty: Cannot be established without further clinical information.

Cross-Model Agreement

  • Multiple models cannot currently identify or agree on any organ system or process involvement due to lack of data. - Divergence: Not applicable as no model has sufficient evidence to propose patterns or diagnoses. - Evidence Tensions: None identified; absence of data precludes conflict or concordance.

Rule-In / Rule-Out Priorities

  • Rule-In: None at this time; no positive findings. - Rule-Out: None definitively; serious conditions cannot be excluded without further testing. - Evidence Pending: Laboratory results, imaging studies, and clinical signs are needed to guide rule-in and rule-out decisions. - Veterinary Not-to-Miss Cautions: Given breed predispositions (e.g., Dalmatian predisposition to urinary stones), consider early screening for urinary tract issues once clinical signs or tests are available.

Testing / Treatment / Diet Trial Priorities

  • Next Tests: • CBC and biochemistry panel • Urinalysis • Abdominal and thoracic imaging • Breed-specific screening (e.g., urate stone risk) if indicated - Diet Additions/Subtractions: Await clinical and laboratory data before dietary recommendations. - Supplement Review Priorities: None indicated at this time. - Response-to-Treatment Markers: Not applicable without treatment initiation. - RAC Follow-Up Priorities: Repeat RAC evaluation after acquisition of clinical and laboratory data to identify emerging markers.

Next Snapshot Trigger

  • New clinical signs or symptoms reported by owner or observed on exam - Results from initial laboratory testing or imaging studies - Response or lack thereof to any initiated treatments or dietary changes

Clinical Caution

  • This review does not constitute a diagnosis. The veterinarian must interpret all findings in the context of the full clinical picture and exercise clinical judgment. Further data collection is essential to guide diagnosis and management.
Evidence Base Used
CASE CONTEXT Case ID: 28 Patient: Minty Species: Dog Breed: Dalmatian Sex: Male Weight kg: 30.00 BCS: 5.00 CASE DETAILS Primary Complaint: Case Status: Open Initial Differential Notes: IMAGING SNAPSHOT EVIDENCE RAC EVIDENCE PRIORITY RANKING This ranked list is built from cleaned RAC marker results and must be weighted by RAC magnitude. RAC >=30 = dominant finding; RAC 25-29 = high priority; RAC 15-24 = moderate priority; RAC 10-14 = low priority; RAC 0-5 = weak/no-response in this session. No positive RAC marker results available. RAC SNAPSHOT EVIDENCE PATHOLOGY / LABORATORY SNAPSHOT EVIDENCE CURRENT EVIDENCE COUNTS Imaging reports: 0 Pathology reports: 0 Other evidence layers are retained in their own modules and will be added to this evidence base in Snapshot V2.
Raw AI Output
Conventional Veterinary Model: - Likely Differentials: None can be reasonably proposed due to absence of positive RAC markers, imaging, or pathology data. - Serious Rule-Outs: No evidence currently to support or exclude serious conditions such as neoplasia, severe infection, or organ failure. These remain theoretical concerns given the species and breed but lack supporting data. - Missing Tests: Comprehensive diagnostic workup is needed including: • Complete blood count and biochemistry panel to assess systemic health and organ function • Urinalysis to evaluate renal and urinary tract status • Imaging studies (thoracic and abdominal radiographs, ultrasound) to detect structural abnormalities • Specific tests based on clinical signs once available (e.g., infectious disease titers, endocrine panels) - Monitoring Markers: Pending establishment of baseline clinical and laboratory data, monitoring should include weight, BCS, hydration status, and any emerging clinical signs. Traditional Chinese Medicine Model: - Possible Patterns: No clinical or diagnostic data to support identification of Qi deficiency, Blood deficiency or stasis, Yin/Yang imbalance, Damp, Heat, Cold, or Phlegm patterns. Channel involvement and Five Element themes cannot be assessed without symptomatology or tongue/pulse findings. - Food Energetics: No dietary information provided to correlate with TCM food energetics or to suggest dietary modification. Homeopathic Model: - Remedy-Picture Themes: No characteristic symptoms or modalities documented to suggest remedy pictures or constitutional types. - Constitutional Observations: Absent; no behavioral, emotional, or physical traits recorded. - Missing Characteristic Symptoms: Modalities (aggravations and ameliorations), detailed symptom descriptions, and mental/emotional state are needed to guide homeopathic reasoning. Anthroposophic Model: - Nerve-Sense, Rhythmic, Metabolic-Limb Systems: Insufficient data to interpret involvement of these systems. - Life Process and Organ-Process Themes: No clinical or diagnostic evidence to suggest disturbance in organ processes or life rhythms. - Certainty: Cannot be established without further clinical information. Cross-Model Agreement: - Multiple models cannot currently identify or agree on any organ system or process involvement due to lack of data. - Divergence: Not applicable as no model has sufficient evidence to propose patterns or diagnoses. - Evidence Tensions: None identified; absence of data precludes conflict or concordance. Rule-In / Rule-Out Priorities: - Rule-In: None at this time; no positive findings. - Rule-Out: None definitively; serious conditions cannot be excluded without further testing. - Evidence Pending: Laboratory results, imaging studies, and clinical signs are needed to guide rule-in and rule-out decisions. - Veterinary Not-to-Miss Cautions: Given breed predispositions (e.g., Dalmatian predisposition to urinary stones), consider early screening for urinary tract issues once clinical signs or tests are available. Testing / Treatment / Diet Trial Priorities: - Next Tests: • CBC and biochemistry panel • Urinalysis • Abdominal and thoracic imaging • Breed-specific screening (e.g., urate stone risk) if indicated - Diet Additions/Subtractions: Await clinical and laboratory data before dietary recommendations. - Supplement Review Priorities: None indicated at this time. - Response-to-Treatment Markers: Not applicable without treatment initiation. - RAC Follow-Up Priorities: Repeat RAC evaluation after acquisition of clinical and laboratory data to identify emerging markers. Next Snapshot Trigger: - New clinical signs or symptoms reported by owner or observed on exam - Results from initial laboratory testing or imaging studies - Response or lack thereof to any initiated treatments or dietary changes Clinical Caution: - This review does not constitute a diagnosis. The veterinarian must interpret all findings in the context of the full clinical picture and exercise clinical judgment. Further data collection is essential to guide diagnosis and management.

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