RadiAnt DICOM Viewer

RadiAnt DICOM Viewer

Smart. Easy. Fast.

RadiAnt is a PACS DICOM viewer for medical images designed to provide you with a unique experience. With its intuitive interface and unrivaled performance, you’ll never look back.
Key features and benefits:

  • Supports multiple DICOM file types
  • All the necessary tools close at hand
  • Quick as lightning
  • Compare different series or studies
  • Search and download studies from PACS locations
  • Local archive
  • Export DICOM files to images and movies

New features:

  • Anonymize DICOM files (add-on package).
  • Rectangle/square ROI tool.

Improvements and bug fixes:

  • Browse to the previous/next group of series when viewing multiple series side by side (Alt + Left/Right arrow).
  • Export studies from a local archive to another one.
  • 3D MPR and 3D VR windows keep their position / full screen state / layout after restart.
  • Date/time tags defined in the overlay.xml file are formatted according to the local system settings.
  • Improved import of add-on extensions.
  • Added support for High-Throughput JPEG 2000 transfer syntax.
  • Added optional CP950 and CP936 Windows character sets (they can be defined in the options.xml file).
  • “Hide patient data” removes also patient birthday from the series preview bar.
  • Ultrasound length measurements are now consistent with other modalities (precision and unit).
  • Improved search in the DICOM tags window.
  • DICOM dictionary updated to 2023d.
  • Fixed issues with zoom & pan reset while browsing tomosynthesis series.
  • Fixed issue with disappearing measurements after switching series in 2D viewer.
  • Fixed window adjustment for certain RGB images not fully compliant with DICOM standard.
  • Fixed missing length measurements for some obscure DICOM images.
  • Fixed rare case of a broken association with a PACS server.
  • Fixed rare crash caused by incorrect JPEG DICOM images.
  • Fixed occasional crashes when sending DICOM images to PACS.

Supports multiple DICOM file types

The software has the capability to open and display studies obtained from different imaging modalities:

  • Digital Radiography (CR, DX)
  • Mammography (MG)
  • Computed Tomography (CT)
  • Magnetic Resonance (MR)
  • Positron Emission Tomography PET-CT (PT)
  • Ultrasonography (US)
  • Digital Angiography (XA)
  • Gamma Camera, Nuclear Medicine (NM)
  • Secondary Pictures and Scanned Images (SC)
  • Structured Reports (SR)

Many types of DICOM images are supported:

  • Monochromatic (e.g. CR, CT, MR) and color (e.g. US, 3D reconstructions)
  • Static images (e.g. CR, MG, CT) and dynamic sequences (e.g. XA, US)
  • Uncompressed and compressed (RLE, JPEG Lossy, JPEG Lossless, JPEG 2000)

All the necessary tools close at hand

RadiAnt DICOM Viewer provides the following basic tools for the manipulation and measurement of images:

  • Fluid zooming and panning
  • Brightness and contrast adjustments, negative mode
  • Preset window settings for Computed Tomography (lung, bone, etc.)
  • Ability to rotate (90, 180 degrees) or flip (horizontal and vertical) images
  • Segment length
  • Mean, minimum and maximum parameter values (e.g. density in Hounsfield Units in Computed Tomography) within circle/ellipse and its area
  • Angle value (normal and Cobb angle)
  • Pen tool for freehand drawing

Quick as lightning

RadiAnt DICOM Viewer was designed to use resources as efficiently as possible. It can make use of a multiprocessor and multicore system with large amounts of gigabytes of RAM, but will also run on an old single-core machine with only 1GB RAM.

A 64-bit version is provided for modern systems to keep all opened images in more than 4GB of memory, if necessary. Asynchronous reading lets you browse and process images while they are still being opened.

All of this is available in one very compact application that has an installer size of just over 7MB.

Compare different series or studies

Multiple series of one study or several studies can be concurrently opened in the same or different windows for comparison purposes.

Series consisting of images that have been acquired in the same plane (e.g. Computed Tomography series before and after administration of the contrast medium) are automatically synchronized by default.

Cross-reference lines are displayed for better correlation of the anatomy when browsing series with different image planes (e.g. Magnetic Resonance study).

Search and download studies from PACS locations

The PACS (Picture Archiving and Communication System) client feature lets RadiAnt DICOM Viewer query and retrieve studies from other PACS hosts.

Supported service class users/providers are: C-ECHO SCU, C-ECHO SCP, C-FIND SCU, C-MOVE-SCU, C-STORE-SCP.

Received DICOM files can be stored in a temporary folder and deleted when RadiAnt closes, or they can be saved in the local database.

Local archive

The local archive feature allows you to import DICOM studies from CD/DVD discs, USB flash drives, local and network folders or PACS servers, and store them on your local hard drive so that they can be easily accessed at a later date.

The local archive can be helpful in situations in which the original media is no longer available, or you would like to open the study without the need to repeatedly retrieve it from a PACS server.

You can also access the database to organize and quickly find studies in your collection of DICOM files that are stored on the hard drive.

Export DICOM files to images and movies

Create visually stunning presentations and professional publications - RadiAnt DICOM Viewer can export DICOM files to JPEG (compressed) or BMP (uncompressed bitmap) images and WMV (Windows Media Video) movies.

One image, an entire series or all opened images can be exported simultaneously.

Displayed images can be quickly copied to the Windows clipboard using the CTRL+C shortcut and can be quickly and easily pasted into Word or PowerPoint documents.

Multiplanar reconstructions

The MPR tool provided within RadiAnt DICOM Viewer can be used to reconstruct images in orthogonal planes (coronal, sagittal, axial or oblique, depending on what the base image plane is). This can help to create a new perception of the anatomy that was not possible to visualize using the base images alone.

The reconstruction process is extremely fast: a coronal series can be created from more than 2000 axial CT slices in approximately three seconds (on a modern Intel Core i7 system).

3D volume rendering

The 3D VR (volume rendering) tool lets you visualize large volumes of data generated by modern CT/MR scanners in three dimensional space. The different aspects of the data set can be interactively explored in the 3D VR window.

This tool lets you rotate the volume, change zoom level and position, adjust color and opacity, measure length and show hidden structures by cutting off the unwanted parts of the volume with the scalpel tool. The image is rendered progressively to maintain fluid operations even on slower machines.

PET-CT image fusion

Overlay a color-mapped PET image onto a CT scan to obtain anatomical references for regions with increased FDG (fluorodeoxyglucose) uptake values.

Use the ellipse tool to measure maximum, minimum and average values of SUVbw (Standardized Uptake Value calculated using body weight) in a specified area.

Image fusion can also be applied to other imaging modalities, such as Magnetic Resonance, e.g. DWI images can be fused with T1 or T2-weighted scans.

Digital Subtraction Angiography

The Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA) technique can be applied to a fluoroscopy series (XA) to allow you to visualize blood vessels better.

The pre-contrast image (so-called mask) is subtracted from the subsequent images in which the arteries/veins are filled with the contrast media and, thus, the bony or dense soft-tissue areas are removed from the final image.

The auto pixel-shift feature lets you automatically correct the alignment of the mask and the live image simply by selecting the area of interest.

Time-intensity curves

RadiAnt DICOM Viewer lets you visualize the lesions' enhancement behavior (e.g. in Breast MRI) by plotting time-intensity curves (TICs).

Different types of curves can be obtained: Ia - straight (the signal intensity continues to increase over the entire dynamic period) / Ib - curved (the time-signal intensity curve is flattened in the late postcontrast period), II - plateau (the signal intensity plateaus in the intermediate and late postcontrast periods) or III - washout (the signal intensity decreases (washes out) in the intermediate postcontrast period).

Multi-touch support

If you have a Windows 8 or Windows 10 touch-enabled device, you might find that gestures (motions that you make with one, two or more fingers) are easier to use than a mouse or keyboard. RadiAnt DICOM Viewer enables users to make use of the array of multi-touch gestures:

  • Touch the image with one finger and move it to browse through images of the displayed series.
  • To zoom in or out, touch two points on the image, and then move your fingers away from or toward each other. Drag the image with two fingers to move it and show invisible parts of zoomed image.
  • You can change the window settings (brightness/contrast) by touching the image with three fingers and moving them up/down (brightness) or left/right (contrast).

Multilingual interface

Thanks to our community, RadiAnt DICOM Viewer interface has been translated into over 20 languages so far:

  • Arabic, Brazilian Portuguese, Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch/Flemish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish.

 

 

For more information or if you would like to buy this product, write to us.

ICONS is a leading technology company and the sole distributor of this product in India.
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