Mckesson Radiology Station Disc Quick Viewer
DISPLAYING MEDICAL IMAGES FROM A CD Obtaining a Viewer If you have a CD (or DVD) with medical images on it, the vast majority of such disks are DICOM CDs. DICOM is the standard format for medical images. Medical imaging equipment manufacturers use the DICOM. McKesson Radiology Technology. 2015 memorandum from the VA Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) FIPS 140-2 Validate Full Disk Encryption (FOE).
I'm a resident in neurology and in my work you deal often with CT scans and MRIs which come on Cds and the viewing software included is for Windows. So I was wondering whether you've heard of any linux software able to open and browse medical imaging. I tried Aesculap but it didn't work, the quality of the images was awful and you couldn't browse them conveniently anyway, you'd have to explore every folder and file one by one.
I've heard about a free open source Mac software called Osirix but there doesn't seem an equivalent for Linux. If anyone knows one please tell me. Googleing on 'ubuntu DICOM' should give you good idea of the present state of affairs. Getting a machine with plenty cpu power and ram will allow you to you to do the work with the more mature widows application in a VM that is dedicated to just that purpose. Also, backing up and restoring VM's are as easy as copying a file, so you will not have to worry about the inevitable widows flakeout at the worst possible time.
Virtualbox works quite well. Last edited by iponeverything; February 14th, 2010 at 06:22 PM. I'm a resident in neurology and in my work you deal often with CT scans and MRIs which come on Cds and the viewing software included is for Windows. Zadachi po administrativnomu pravu rk s otvetami. So I was wondering whether you've heard of any linux software able to open and browse medical imaging.
I tried Aesculap but it didn't work, the quality of the images was awful and you couldn't browse them conveniently anyway, you'd have to explore every folder and file one by one. I've heard about a free open source Mac software called Osirix but there doesn't seem an equivalent for Linux. If anyone knows one please tell me.I'm a radiology medical resident, and i'm using EvoRad solution. Works perfectly on ubuntu. It's more professional and uses the java Environment.
Just go to But i would still prefer a efilm or osirix port to linux. I'm a resident in neurology and in my work you deal often with CT scans and MRIs which come on Cds and the viewing software included is for Windows. So I was wondering whether you've heard of any linux software able to open and browse medical imaging. I tried Aesculap but it didn't work, the quality of the images was awful and you couldn't browse them conveniently anyway, you'd have to explore every folder and file one by one. I've heard about a free open source Mac software called Osirix but there doesn't seem an equivalent for Linux. If anyone knows one please tell me.I'm assuming these are outside films brought in with patients. Our PACS system is McKesson and definitely will export to linux via CD.