DocumentCode
409559
Title
An open source based application for integration and sharing of multi-modal cardiac image data in a heterogeneous environment
Author
Marcheschi, P. ; Positano, V. ; Ferdeghini, E.M. ; Mazzarisi, A. ; Benassi, A.
Author_Institution
Inst. of Clinical Physiol., CNR, Pisa, Italy
fYear
2003
fDate
21-24 Sept. 2003
Firstpage
367
Lastpage
370
Abstract
DICOM format has been recognized as the de facto standard for storage, transferring and sharing of cardiac images along different modalities like magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), nuclear medicine, computer tomography (CT), digital angiography (XA), digital radiology. However, in many medical environments there is a large need to have cardiac images available in formats (i.e. GIF, BMP or JPEG) that are compatible with widely used office automation applications. The here proposed system for multi modality image sharing and conversion is based on both the standard DICOM communication protocol and the common internet file system (CIFS) protocol. DICOM images from any DICOM compliant station can be transferred to a dedicated DICOM server, which has been implemented using the freely available DCMTK DICOM toolkit from Kuratorium OFFIS. An automatic procedure converts DICOM images into the desired image format, creating at the same time a file tree that allows fast and easy retrieval of image data. The entire proposed framework is implemented using open source software with large advantages in terms of cost reduction and software flexibility and robustness.
Keywords
Internet; biomedical MRI; blood vessels; cardiology; computerised tomography; cost-benefit analysis; diagnostic radiography; image retrieval; medical image processing; medical information systems; open systems; DCMTK DICOM toolkit; DICOM format; Kuratorium OFFIS; cardiac image data sharing; cardiac image storage; cardiac image transferring; common internet file system protocol; computer tomography; cost reduction; digital angiography; digital radiology; image retrieval; magnetic resonance imaging; multi-modal cardiac image data integration; nuclear medicine; open source; software flexibility; software robustness; Application software; DICOM; Image converters; Image recognition; Image storage; Magnetic resonance imaging; Nuclear medicine; Open source software; Protocols; Tomography;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computers in Cardiology, 2003
ISSN
0276-6547
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8170-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CIC.2003.1291168
Filename
1291168
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