Medical imaging on Apple device Video
Medical imaging on Apple device Video Transcript
>> [ music ] ^m00:00:05 As we know from our existing customer base of radiologists and radiation oncologists, it's easy to be caught without access to a work station whether across the hospital, at the gas station, or at the golf course. [ laughter ] Right now we're moving through the slices of a fusion study with a one finger slide where we have a CT scan showing anatomic data, and a PET scan showing metabolic activity. The two finger slide changes the blending. Think of how a weather map works where you have geographic data overlaid with temperature. We fuse the two together and present it as a multi planar reconstruction. Tab view to change the viewing plain so that you can see the data from the bottom, from the side, and from the front. Early on we recognized the potential of the iPhone and we set out to see if this was even possible. Finally let's look at the MIT movie. This is a 3D reconstruction ideal for visualizing PET images. Let's change the color for this. Let's choose rainbow. Imagine a doctor sitting with their patient sharing the images with him iPhone to iPhone, or an oncologist interactively reviewing a radiation treatment plan. The iPhone has created a new direction for our company. We've taken a complex desktop application, removed it from the realm of black art, and placed it in the hands of physicians and patients; and we've only just scratched the surface. Look for MIM at the launch of the app store. Thank you.
Related Videos
At Apple WWDC 2008, Steve Jobs reveals the iPhone 3G with faster download speeds, longer battery life, GPS, a lower price, and a near worldwide release on July 11.
Here's one way to make your iPhone photos stand out: turn any photo into a black-and-white image and add a swatch of color to let an object pop.
Jobs unveils GPS for the 3G iPhone
At the Apple WWDC 2008 in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs demonstrates GPS on the new 3G iPhone. Jobs shows how an iPhone traveling in a car going down San Francisco's famously crooked Lombard Street can be tracked as its user navigates the curves.
Harvard Medical School CIO John Halamka is on the cutting edge of technology, both professionally and personally. Not only does he manage 2 million patients, 3,000 doctors and 150 major applications, he's got an RFID chip implanted in his arm. Halamka sits down with ZDNet Editor in Chief Dan Farber to talk about key issues in the medical field.
eBay shows off auction app for iPhone
At the Apple WWDC 2008 in San Francisco, Ken Sun of eBay shows off Auctions on the iPhone. The new app has a basic front door with options to track auctions you've bid on, and see whether you've been outbid. You can also pick up photos from the auction listings and blow them up to full screen. eBay is making this app available for free.
New iPhone: Get and make local news
At the Apple WWDC 2008, Benjamin Mosse of the Associated Press demonstrates how the organization's new free iPhone software will send users local news based on where they are. The feeds are customizable and can be shared. Users can also upload their own photos to the AP with their iPhones.
iPhone 3G to be available in 70 countries
At Apple WWDC 2008, Steve Jobs reveals the map of countries and carriers that will be getting the next-generation iPhone beginning July 11.
WWDC 2009: TomTom launches navigation app for iPhone
At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, Peter-Frans Pauwels, CTO of TomTom, shows a new navigation application for the iPhone. The new software combines map data with turn-by-turn navigation. The new app will be available in the summer.
WWDC 2009: Zipcar launches app for iPhone
At Apple's WWDC in San Francisco, Luke Schneider of Zipcar shows off a new application for the iPhone. The new software enables Zipcar users to find and reserve the nearest available vehicle on a city map. It also sports a feature that will beep the horn of the reserved Zipcar and unlock it when the user is close by.
Doctors tap broadband to monitor patients remotely
Some hospitals in the United States are using broadband technology to improve patient care and cope with a national shortage of critical care physicians. Correspondent James Hilliard visits Sutter General Hospital in Sacramento, Calif., where patients in the intensive care unit are being monitored by doctors a mile away in a control room called the eICU.
