Difference between revisions of "Digital pathology"
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Jensflorian (talk | contribs) (Whole slide images) |
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*There is now a [http://dicom.nema.org/Dicom/DICOMWSI/ DICOM] standard for whole slide images. | *There is now a [http://dicom.nema.org/Dicom/DICOMWSI/ DICOM] standard for whole slide images. | ||
* Most important criterion for virtual microscopy: Pathologists need the ability to rapidly pan and zoom images. When Z‑planes are available, viewers must also provide rapid scrolling though the planes. | |||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Latest revision as of 14:05, 16 October 2019
Digital pathology is pathology done with a digital computer.
Digital slides
- Typical cytology slide ~ 5 GB.
- Typical anatomical pathology slide > 2 GB.
Whole-Slide Images
- Most common formats:
Aperio (.svs, .tif) Philips (.tiff) Hamamatsu (.vms, .vmu, .ndpi) Leica (.scn) Sakura (.svslide) MIRAX (.mrxs) Ventana (.bif, .tif) Generic tiled TIFF (.tif)
SlideJ is a plugin for ImageJ for viewing most of the above mentioned formats.[1] A free C library exists to read whole-slide images.[2]
- There is a push for an open virtual slide format.
- There is now a DICOM standard for whole slide images.
- Most important criterion for virtual microscopy: Pathologists need the ability to rapidly pan and zoom images. When Z‑planes are available, viewers must also provide rapid scrolling though the planes.
See also
External links
- ↑ Della Mea, V.; Baroni, GL.; Pilutti, D.; Di Loreto, C. (2017). "SlideJ: An ImageJ plugin for automated processing of whole slide images.". PLoS One 12 (7): e0180540. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0180540. PMID 28683129.
- ↑ URL: http://openslide.org/. Accessed on: 3 May 2013.