Medical image burning refers to burning images generated by CT, MRI, DR, DSA and other imaging examination equipment onto a CD-ROM. This CD-ROM can be used for clinical diagnosis, as well as a patient's health record, and can also be used for teaching and research in hospitals and schools.
Traditional medical imaging uses film as a carrier, and with the development and upgrading of inspection equipment, each inspection produces more and more images. An examination requires many films to present all the images, but generally hospitals only send patients one or at most 4-5 films, which is impossible to represent all the images.
As a real life example, I went to the hospital for a sinus checkup, and the doctor looked at my nasal passages through a broad nose device and said that I might have a sinus infection with severe symptoms, and suggested that I get a CT to look at it. I was given a piece of paper film after my CT, a **** with 48 images on it and each one was very small. I showed the film with the report to my doctor, who said that it wasn't very serious from what the film showed and that I needed to open my full images on PACS to see what was going on. By looking at all of my images, he realized that there were locations in the nasal passages that were on the verge of becoming blocked, which was very serious, but it didn't show up on the film at all because it was a selection of partial image pictures that were on the film. This is a good example of the limitations of film as an image carrier, so burning all the images onto a single CD-ROM allows for a more accurate clinical diagnosis.
Index Medical's Medical Imaging CD-ROM Burning Management System is not only able to automatically burn all of a patient's original examination images onto a single CD-ROM, the number of images can reach tens of thousands. In addition, it can print all the Chinese information of the patient's examination on the cover of the CD-ROM.
And Indira Medical is the first company in China to conduct research and development of a digital medical imaging CD-ROM recording system, with an industry-leading research and development team, and the advanced nature of the system is ahead of other companies in the industry.