Clinical Laboratory Iridology & Microscopy

 
Iridology is a non-invasive, safe and painless diagnostic technique. Your Iris contains a unique pattern in the delicate fibers, which is mapped into zones representing all the organs, glands and functions of the body. By determining exactly where a particular marking lies, an iridologist will know of a potential health problem.
 
 
Key concepts may include:
 
📝 1. Iris analysis to assess systemic health
📝 2. Preventive insights, constitutional strength
📝 3. Identify predispositions
📝 4. Used to guide lifestyle changes
📅 5. Reports, Suggestions and Supplements
 
 
Step-by-Step breakdown of an Iridology Session:
🧪 Initial Consultation:
👁️ The iridologist asks about your health history, lifestyle, and any symptoms.
👁️ This helps them contextualize what they might see in your iris.
 
 
🧪 Iris Examination by using tools like:
👁️ Magnifying lenses
👁️ High-resolution iridology cameras
👁️ Iridology software
      They closely inspect the patterns, colors, textures, and markings in your iris.
 
 
🧪 Reference to Iridology Charts:
👁️ The iris is divided into zones-like slices of a pie-each linked to a specific organ or body system.
👁️ For example, a dark spot in the lower right quadrant of the right iris might correspond to the liver.
 
 
🧪 Iridologists Interpretation:
👁️ Pigment changes
👁️ Iris Rings
👁️ Fiber structure
    These are interpreted as signs of inflammation, toxicity, or constitutional strength.
 
 
🧪 Systematic Investigation View: (AI Feature)
👁️ Automatic open of Latest Right and Left Read pictures
👁️ Automatic highlight of Most Imbalanced Body System
👁️ Automatic highlight of Most Imbalanced Organ specific location in Lecture Specific sector window
👁️ Automatic highlight of Most Imbalanced Organ information in Anatomical & Physiological window
 
 
 
 
🧩 Customizing Graphs – Organ to System/Group Mapping
Customizing graphs by moving organs into specific system names or custom group names makes analysis more organized, personalized, and patient-friendly, while preserving the accuracy of the underlying health data.
 

1. Move Organ into System Name

  • Purpose: Lets practitioners reassign an organ marker (e.g., Liver, Kidney, Heart) into a defined body system (e.g., Digestive System, Excretory System, Circulatory System).
  • Usage: This creates a structured view of health data by grouping related organs under their physiological systems.
  • Benefit: Provides system-level clarity for analysis and reporting.

2. Custom Group Naming

  • Purpose: Enables practitioners to create custom group names instead of default system labels.
  • Usage: For example, rename Digestive System to Gut Health, or create a new group called Stress Axis that combines organs from different systems.
  • Benefit: Supports personalized terminology, patient-friendly communication, and clinic branding.

3. Graph Flexibility

  • Purpose: Graphs are dynamic and editable, allowing drag-and-drop or selection-based reassignment of organ markers.
  • Usage: Practitioners can visually move an organ into a chosen system or custom group, then save the layout.
  • Benefit: Makes the graph adaptable to different therapeutic approaches (holistic, naturopathic, clinical).
 
 
 
 
 
 
🧪 Feedback, Recommendations & Advice:
👁️ Diet and Nutritions
👁️ Herbal supplementss
👁️ Lifestyle changes
 
      Iridology is used more for preventive insight and identifying areas of weakness or imbalance.
 
 
Microscopy
 
 
Microscopy is the science and technique of using microscopes to observe objects that are too small to be seen with the naked eye-think cells, bacteria, viruses, and even atoms in some cases.
 
 
Key Roles of Microscopy
 
 
Identifying Infectious Agents
 
 
👁️Microscopy helps detect bacteria, fungi, parasites, and viruses in samples like blood, sputum, or tissue.
👁️Techniques like bright-field and fluorescence microscopy are widely used in clinical microbiology labs.
 
 
Cancer Diagnosis
 
 
👁️Pathologists examine biopsied tissue under a microscope to identify abnormal cell structures and tumor types.
👁️Histopathology relies heavily on microscopy to stage and grade cancers.
 
 
Blood Disorders
 
 
👁️Blood smears are analyzed to detect conditions like anemia, leukemia, and malaria.
👁️Microscopy reveals changes in cell shape, size, and count.
 
 
Urine and Tissue Analysis
 
 
👁️Microscopy helps detect crystals, cells, and microorganisms in urine samples.
👁️It’s also used to examine tissue biopsies for inflammation, infection, or structural abnormalities.
 
 
The following LRC programs to be referred.