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Ginkgo CADx, cross-platform open source DICOM viewer; IrfanView, an image viewer for Windows with DICOM support; MicroDicom, DICOM viewer for Windows; VistA imaging, public domain fully integrated PACS, image, and scanned document information system. Incorporates proprietary modules not available outside the VA
Ginkgo CADx is an abandoned [2] multi platform (Windows, Linux, [3] Mac OS X) DICOM viewer (*.dcm) and dicomizer (convert different files to DICOM). Ginkgo CADx is licensed under LGPL license, being an open source project with an open core approach. The goal of Ginkgo CADx project was to develop an open source professional DICOM workstation. [4]
MicroDicom is a free DICOM viewer and editor for Windows. It can open DICOM images produced by medical equipment (MRI, PET, CT, ...). It can also possible to open other image formats - BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, etc. It has also been used by the U.S. Department of Veterans' Affairs to get medical data on their state of health. [3]
InVesalius – free, open source software that can be used to view DICOM images and transform DICOM image stacks to 3D models and export them to .STL; IrfanView; MicroDicom – free DICOM viewer for Windows. Noesis – free DICOM importer and exporter with 3D visualization for Windows.
The Studierfenster DICOM Browser. This allows client-side parsing a local folder with DICOM (Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine) [27] [28] files. Afterwards, the whole folder can be converted to compressed .nrrd (nearly raw raster data) files and downloaded as a single .zip file.
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Orthanc is a standalone DICOM server. It is designed to improve the DICOM flows in hospitals and to support research about the automated analysis of medical images. Orthanc lets its users focus on the content of the DICOM files, hiding the complexity of the DICOM format and of the DICOM protocol.
The software supports hundreds of file formats, with a focus on allowing users to understand and analyze data in a way which would not be possible without reverse engineering. This is exemplified by the software's support for many proprietary file formats (including, more recently, animation data from the video game Final Fantasy XV ), in ...