Medical Imaging Software: More Than Just a Picture

Summer Banks
In a hospital or other clinical setting, medical imaging software is crucial to the diagnosis and treatment of illnesses, injuries and disease. The three main methods of medical imaging are X-ray, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for diagnosis and treatment of patients. The equipment used to produce recognizable medical imaging files from body scans is very expensive, but without advanced medical imaging software for medical imaging file acquisition, the medical imaging files are worthless.

Medical imaging file acquisition renders body scans as a PDF document that can be saved, searched, accessed quickly and transferred via mobile devices and the Internet. Doctors and other trained professionals can then use the resulting medical imaging file to pinpoint a problem or rule out a diagnosis. On a basic level, medical imaging software can analyze X-ray and other forms of medical imaging files by creating a digital file of the taken medical imaging picture. Think of the software as the same software used on personal home printers with a scanning function. Any medical imaging picture can be placed in that scanner and a digital PDF created from a physical medical imaging file.

Medical imaging software works with state of the art medical diagnosing equipment to create the same sort of PDF. The rendered medical imaging picture can be manipulated by medical professionals in a variety of ways including zooming, printing and sending over secured lines to other medical professionals. In years past, doctors would have to send a physical copy of the scan to another physician to aid in diagnosis or treatment. This process could take weeks to complete. With medical imaging software, the transfer is instant and two doctors can collaborate from a thousand miles away for the good of a patient right now, not in a few weeks.

The future is bright for medical imaging file acquisition and medical imaging. Where once diagnosis was the only use for this technology, now doctors can use the same medical imaging files to focus treatment and reveal whether one treatment protocol is working or if another is needed for the health of the patient.

Published by Summer Banks - Featured Contributor in Health & Wellness

Summer Banks is a medical assistant with four years college nursing education. She is a senior health writer for Dietspotlight.com and Featured Contributor in Women s Health, Parenting and Dating & Relations...  View profile

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