Mobile MIM offers real-time viewing, registration, fusion, and/or display for diagnosis of medical images from the following modalities: SPECT, PET, CT, MRI, X-ray, and ultrasound. The app provides interactive image manipulation tools such as zoom, pan, cine, and contrast adjustment images through a multipoint touch screen interface.Ĭurrent Version (updated): 3.0.9 (October 8, 2014) The app works with any DICOM-compatible software, including PACS, medical workstations, and acquisition modalities.
OsiriX HD is a widely known full DICOM image viewer, which allows for downloading and manipulating a series of images from all modalities directly onto an iOS device. Please e-mail us at or let us know on Twitter ( or Facebook ( /RadiologyToday).Ĭurrent Version (updated): 4.1.5 (May 16, 2015) We'd also be interested in which radiology apps-as well as any others-you find useful so we can share them with readers. That said, here's a list of radiology apps for the Apple and Android platforms. It makes sense that less of radiology is migrating to handheld devices than is the case in many other fields. The appeal of many reference and education apps also is a matter of personal preference. Who would want to view images on a smaller screen with fewer tools than their workstation? Enough radiologists have workstations set up at home to handle many of those cases as well.
Many PACS offer a mobile viewer, which tends to serve as an emergency tool for most of the radiologists who use it. Ask half a dozen radiologists about mobile radiology apps and you can expect about six answers.