PACS provides a single tool for quality control and audit purposes. Rejected images can be tagged, allowing later analysis (as may be required under radiation protection legislation).
We provide a complete reporting tool as part of our image viewer. Reporting can be done directly by typing into the reporting system. After reports are marked as final, they can be downloaded and printed for your records. Features like search and advanced search is possible with our PACS/reporting module.
When a study has been reported by a radiologist the PACS can mark it as read. This avoids needless double-reading. The report can be attached to the images and be viewable via a single interface.� While taking out print out the image is printed along with the report thus avoiding mistakes.��
Our image viewer allows standard manipulation and annotation. Images can be attached to reports. It also offers advanced features such as series linking, single point linkage through multiple planes and planar reconstruction.��
The amount of storage available in the archive depends on how much a customer wants or can afford. Many cardiology departments have indicated that they want 6 to 12 months' worth of images stored online. Older images can then, as an option, be sent to an offsite deep-storage archive. A typical cardiac catheterization or angiography study requires about 250 MB (at 2:1 lossless compression) of storage. Echocardiology studies can require anywhere from 25MB to 300MB of storage, depending on the type of study. Echo studies are typically compressed at 20:1 lossy compression.��
Simplicity, flexibility and it is user friendly. �Maintenance is almost negligible.
Yes, we provide one of the most sophisticated image viewers available.�
PACS provides a single tool for quality control and audit purposes. Rejected images can be tagged, allowing later analysis (as may be required under radiation protection legislation).
We provide a complete reporting tool as part of our image viewer. Reporting can be done directly by typing into the reporting system. After reports are marked as final, they can be downloaded and printed for your records. Features like search and advanced search is possible with our PACS/reporting module.
When a study has been reported by a radiologist the PACS can mark it as read. This avoids needless double-reading. The report can be attached to the images and be viewable via a single interface.� While taking out print out the image is printed along with the report thus avoiding mistakes.��
Our image viewer allows standard manipulation and annotation. Images can be attached to reports. It also offers advanced features such as series linking, single point linkage through multiple planes and planar reconstruction.��
The amount of storage available in the archive depends on how much a customer wants or can afford. Many cardiology departments have indicated that they want 6 to 12 months' worth of images stored online. Older images can then, as an option, be sent to an offsite deep-storage archive. A typical cardiac catheterization or angiography study requires about 250 MB (at 2:1 lossless compression) of storage. Echocardiology studies can require anywhere from 25MB to 300MB of storage, depending on the type of study. Echo studies are typically compressed at 20:1 lossy compression.��