Grammar & style review
Polish your medical writing. Paste a paragraph, abstract or section and get a clean edited version plus the key grammar, clarity and style fixes — part of the MedPulse Research Writing Assistant.
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Sign in free →Academic style tips
Prefer short, direct sentences
One idea per sentence. Long, clause-heavy sentences are the most common reason reviewers call a paper hard to read.
Use active voice where natural
“We measured…” is clearer than “measurements were taken.” Passive voice is fine for methods, but don't overuse it.
Define abbreviations once
Expand each abbreviation at first use, then use the short form. Avoid abbreviations in the title and abstract where possible.
Keep tense consistent
Methods and results are usually past tense; established facts are present tense. Mixed tenses distract reviewers.
Free tool for education. The AI editor preserves meaning but can miss context — always re-read the edited version and confirm no clinical facts, doses or numbers changed.
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