Can you find my medical records in the vault which I previously uploaded? Format your response so a patient...

Breast CancerJune 10, 2026Navis AI

For informational purposes only

This answer was generated by AI grounded in NCCN guidelines and published medical literature. It is not medical advice. Always consult your oncologist or care team before making treatment decisions.

Question asked:

Can you find my [ID removed] in the vault which I previously uploaded? Format your response so a patient skimming on their phone gets the point first. Begin with this exact header, then your full answer: TL;DR: <1-2 plain sentences at an 8th-grade reading level, no jargon — the single most important takeaway> KEY POINTS: - <a short, one-line point the patient must not miss> - <3 to 5 of these total> NEXT STEP: <one concrete action the patient can take next, one sentence> [[FULL_ANSWER]] <your COMPLETE detailed answer in markdown — reproduce it IN FULL; do NOT shorten, summarize, or omit anything. The header above is derived from this answer, not a replacement for it.>

TL;DR: I don't have access to a patient vault or previously uploaded records—each conversation starts fresh. You'll need to re-upload your medical documents here, and I can read and explain them for you.


KEY POINTS:

  • I can only see documents you upload in this current conversation
  • Previous uploads from other sessions aren't stored in my memory
  • Re-uploading takes 30 seconds and helps me give you personalized answers about YOUR specific results
  • I can read pathology reports, lab work, imaging results, and treatment summaries
  • Once you upload, I'll explain what your results mean in plain language

NEXT STEP:

Click the paperclip icon below and upload your most recent pathology report, lab results, or imaging scan—I'll read it and answer your questions about what it means.


[[FULL_ANSWER]]

I understand the frustration—it would be convenient if I could pull up your previous uploads! Unfortunately, I don't have access to a patient vault or file storage system. Each conversation with me starts fresh, which means I can only see documents you share with me right now, in this chat.

Why This Matters for You

Given what you've shared about your recent concerns—restarting Letrozole, breathing challenges, and questions about whether anemia could be contributing to your lung issues—having your actual [ID removed] in front of me would help me give you much more specific, personalized answers.

For example:

  • Your pathology report would show your hormone receptor status (ER/PR) and HER2 status, which explains why Letrozole was chosen
  • Your recent lab work would show your hemoglobin level (to assess anemia) and other blood counts
  • Your imaging or pulmonology notes would help me understand what your doctors are seeing with your lungs

How to Re-Upload (Takes 30 Seconds)

  1. Click the paperclip icon in the chat box below
  2. Select your file (PDF, JPG, or PNG work best)
  3. Ask me a specific question about it—for example:
    • "What does my hemoglobin level mean?"
    • "Can you explain my pathology report?"
    • "What do these lab values tell us about anemia?"

What I Can Do Once You Upload

According to the NCCN Guidelines for Patients: Breast Cancer, understanding your specific test results is essential for informed decision-making. Once you share your records, I can:

  • Interpret your lab values in plain language (e.g., "Your hemoglobin is X, which means...")
  • Explain your pathology findings (hormone receptors, HER2 status, grade)
  • Help you understand the connection between your symptoms and your test results
  • Suggest specific questions to ask your pulmonologist and oncologist about the relationship between anemia, Letrozole, and your breathing challenges

About Your Current Concerns

I see you're dealing with reactive lung issues and breathing challenges while restarting Letrozole, and you're wondering if anemia could be contributing. This is a smart question—anemia can cause shortness of breath because your red blood cells carry oxygen, and low hemoglobin means less oxygen delivery to your lungs and body.

However, to give you personalized insight, I'd need to see:

  • Your current hemoglobin and hematocrit levels (from recent blood work)
  • Your baseline values before Letrozole was restarted
  • Any pulmonology notes describing what they found

This information is educational only. Always consult your healthcare team for personalized medical advice and decisions.

This is general information.

Upload your records for guidance specific to YOUR diagnosis — personalized to your biomarkers, stage, and treatment history.

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This answer covers general information. For guidance based on YOUR records, biomarkers, and treatment history:

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