Abstract

Tomographic medical imaging systems produce hundreds to thousands of slices, enabling three-dimensional (3D) analysis. Radiologists process these images through various tools and techniques in order to generate 3D renderings for various applications, such as surgical planning, medical education, and volumetric measurements. To save and store these visualizations, current systems use snapshots or video exporting, which prevents further optimizations and requires the storage of significant additional data. The Grayscale Softcopy Presentation State extension of the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard resolves this issue for two-dimensional (2D) data by introducing an extensive set of parameters, namely 2D Presentation States (2DPR), that describe how an image should be displayed. 2DPR allows storing these parameters instead of storing parameter applied images, which cause unnecessary duplication of the image data. Since there is currently no corresponding extension for 3D data, in this study, a DICOM-compliant object called 3D presentation states (3DPR) is proposed for the parameterization and storage of 3D medical volumes. To accomplish this, the 3D medical visualization process is divided into four tasks, namely pre-processing, segmentation, post-processing, and rendering. The important parameters of each task are determined. Special focus is given to the compression of segmented data, parameterization of the rendering process, and DICOM-compliant implementation of the 3DPR object. The use of 3DPR was tested in a radiology department on three clinical cases, which require multiple segmentations and visualizations during the workflow of radiologists. The results show that 3DPR can effectively simplify the workload of physicians by directly regenerating 3D renderings without repeating intermediate tasks, increase efficiency by preserving all user interactions, and provide efficient storage as well as transfer of visualized data.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s40846-015-0097-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Eylul University, 35160 Izmir, Turkey 4 School of Medicine, Radiology Department, Dokuz EylulUniversity, Izmir, TurkeyDigital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) [1] is a standard for the handling, storage, and transmission of digital medical images and related information

  • The results show that 3D presentation states (3DPR) can effectively simplify the workload of physicians by directly regenerating 3D renderings without repeating intermediate tasks, increase efficiency by preserving all user interactions, and provide efficient storage as well as transfer of visualized data

  • These three test cases consist of large homogeneous regions, which are beneficial for compression methods

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Summary

Introduction

Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) [1] is a standard for the handling, storage, and transmission of digital medical images and related information. The Grayscale Softcopy Presentation State (GSPS) Storage Supplement [2] creates a DICOM Information Object Definition (IOD) called GSPS, in addition to the definition of DICOM’s grayscale image model. This object contains an extensive set of parameters, namely Presentation States (PR), defining how a particular image or set of images should be presented to the user

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