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The C Users' Group Library 1994 August
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wc-cdrom-cusersgrouplibrary-1994-08.iso
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vol_200
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293_01
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readme
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Sample data files for 3-D medical imaging software.
/*************************************************************
3-D Reconstruction of Medical Images
Three Dimensional Reconstruction Of Medical
Images from Serial Slices - CT, MRI, Ultrasound
These programs process a set of slices images (scans) for one
patient. It outputs two sets of files containing nine predefined
views of bony surfaces. One set contains distance values and
the other gradient values.
The distance values are used as 3-D spatial topographic surface
coordinate maps for geometrical analysis of the scanned object.
The gradient values are used for rendering the surface maps on
CRT displays for subjective viewing where perception of small
surface details is important.
Daniel Geist, B.S.
Michael W. Vannier, M.D.
Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology
Washington University School of Medicine
510 S. Kingshighway Blvd.
St. Louis, Mo. 63110
These programs may be copied and used freely for non-commercial
purposes by developers with inclusion of this notice.
********************************************************************/
The files DBO.out, DRL.out and DRE.out are 3-D surface
images 256 x 256 (or slightly fewer lines) with 8 bits
per pixel. These are 3-D reconstruction images obtained
from CT scans using the grad.c program supplied by the
authors.
The data file, "CTBILD.001", is a sample CT scan slice
from a Siemens Somatom 2 CT scanner. It has a header
block of 512 bytes, followed by 256 image lines. Each
image line has 256 elements (pixels or voxels, if you
prefer). Each pixel consists of 16 bits or 2 bytes. Of
these, only the low order 11 bits contain gray scale
data. The high order 5 bits (or in the case of other
CT scanners, the high order 4 bits) may be ignored.
If you are interested in other CT scan data sets in
IBM PC/AT format, we may be able to help you. This is
true when there is some academic purpose for the request.
Contact the authors, as listed below, for more information
on 3-D reconstruction imaging for the PC (and other
platforms). Keep us informed on your progress, as we
are most pleased to hear from you and share our work in
biomedical image processing....
Michael W. Vannier
Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology
Washington University School of Medicine
510 S. Kingshighway Blvd.
St. Louis, Mo. 63110
June 1989