You are here

Project Wizard

You can use the category filters given on the right sidebar to narrow down your search results.

Vurtigo

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 3 (3 votes)

Vurtigo is a four-dimensional (3D + time) real-time visualization software for guiding cardiovascular interventions. It is designed to be part of a pipeline that can connect it to a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner, actively tracked catheters, and navigational devices.

Written in C++ under the GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1, Vurtigo features a plug-in based architecture, allowing developers to extend the software using an interface to manipulate objects within Vurtigo. The software runs on Win32, Linux and Mac OS X.

Grassroots DICOM (GDCM)

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 3.5 (13 votes)

Grassroots DICOM (GDCM) is an implementation of the DICOM standard designed to be open source so that researchers may access clinical data directly. GDCM includes a file format definition and a network communications protocol, both of which should be extended to provide a full set of tools for a researcher or small medical imaging vendor to interface with an existing medical database.

Mayam

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 2 (10 votes)

A Cross-platform DICOM viewer developed in Java using the dcm4che toolkit. Mayam is still work under progress. The current features are:

  • DICOM Listener for Q/R
  • DICOM Send
  • Local DB for storing study information
  • Importing DICOM studies from local disk
  • Parsing DicomDir from local disk or CD
  • Query compressed studies without decompressing them
  • Multiple Studies viewer using Layout,Tab view

CDMEDIC PACS WEB

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 3.8 (16 votes)

Full featured free PACS based on ctn or dcm4chee, dcmtk and mysql, with remote accessiom using apache and perl available for Linux in Debian packaging format for i386, amd64 and Mac OS darwin i386 and ppc.

MediPy

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 3.2 (5 votes)

MediPy is a cross-platform software (Windows, Linux, Mac OS), dedicated to the visualization and processing aspects of medical imaging. It is targeted at both physicians and researchers, being both user-friendly and easy to extend. Physicians will benefit from the pre-programmed tasks (e.g. segmentation, registration, detection of lesions) and the possibility to record new tasks, tailoring the software to each user. The use of standard file formats (Analyze/Nifti, Dicom) allows to load image from many sources, as well as integrate to a PACS.

dicompyler

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 3.8 (9 votes)

dicompyler is an extensible, fully open source radiation therapy research platform based on the DICOM standard. It also functions as a cross-platform viewer for DICOM and DICOM RT objects. dicompyler is written in Python and is built on pydicom, wxPython, PIL, and matplotlib and runs on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.

GIMIAS

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 2.4 (10 votes)

GIMIAS is a workflow-oriented environment for solving advanced biomedical image computing and individualized simulation problems, which is extensible through the development of problem-specific plug-ins. In addition, GIMIAS provides an open source framework for efficient development of research and clinical software prototypes integrating contributions from the Physiome community while allowing business-friendly technology transfer and commercial product development.

GIMIAS suites are collections of prototypes that build a complete platform for one or more clinical applications.

DeVIDE

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 4 (3 votes)

DeVIDE, or the Delft Visualisation and Image processing Development Environment, is a cross-platform software framework for the rapid prototyping, testing and deployment of visualisation and image processing algorithms. The software was developed within the Visualisation group. DeVIDE's primary (and currently only) front-end is a data-flow boxes-and-lines network editor. In this regard, it is very similar to AVS, OpenDX, Khoros or VISSION. DeVIDE integrates functionality from libraries such as VTK, ITK, GDCM, DCMTK, numpy and matplotlib. It is being very actively developed.

3D Slicer

Rating: 
Your rating: None Average: 2.6 (34 votes)

3D Slicer is an open source software platform for medical image informatics, image processing, and three-dimensional visualization. Built over two decades through support from the National Institutes of Health and a worldwide developer community, Slicer brings free, powerful cross-platform processing tools to physicians, researchers, and the general public.

Pages