From the January/February 2013 issue of HealthCare Business News magazine
Non-diagnostic viewing:
OsiriX HD
Company: Pixmeo Sarl
Cost: $29.99
Current version: 3.5.2
Last update: Oct. 24, 2012
Works on: iPhone, iPad and iPod touch
An iOS version of Swiss firm Pixmeo Sarl’s popular DICOM image-viewer, OsiriX HD works on the iPad, iPhone and iPod touch, allowing zooming, panning and window leveling of X-rays and other images. Unlike its PC workstation-based parent OsirisMD, the OsiriX is not cleared by the FDA for primary diagnostic reading. But it’s also an order of magnitude cheaper. (OsirisMD will run you a cool $500.) “I use OsiriX when looking at something on my iPad,” Janice Honeyman-Buck, the editor of the Journal of Digital Imaging, a peer-reviewed imaging informatics journal put out by the Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine, told DOTmed News.

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Productivity:
PDF Reader Pro
Company: Yuyao Mobile Software Inc.
Cost: $5.99
Version: 3.0.1
Last updated: Dec. 18, 2012
Works on: iPhone, iPad and iPod touch
IAnnotate PDF
Company: Branchfire Inc.
Cost: $9.99
Version: 2.4
Updated: Nov. 30, 2012
Works on: iPad, Android tablet
Two of a slew of PDF readers available for iOS and Android devices, PDF Reader Pro and iAnnotate let you read, highlight and make notes on PDFs on the go. The latest version of iAnnotate also lets you open Microsoft Word and PowerPoint files. PDF readers might not seem like technological marvels, but they’re essential, especially for medical professionals and academics. “If you’re reading journal articles, you can just download them and read them,” Honeyman-Buck said. Or as Dr. Michael Richardson put it in his list of essential apps for radiologists recently published in the American Journal of Roentgenology, “A good PDF reader or manager should be on everyone’s short list of apps.” (Richardson, incidentally, recommends GoodReader.)
Reference:
Eponyms
Company: Pascal Pfiffner
Cost: $1.99 (Student version: free)
Version: 1.4.2
Late updated: Dec. 18, 2012
Works on: iPhone, iPad and iPod touch
Ever wonder what Bazin’s disease is? (Leg ulcers usually on women, once thought to be caused only by tuberculosis.) What about Adamson’s fringe? (The bottom third of a strand of hair.) These are examples of eponyms, or terms named after somebody. Definitions for these and more can be found in the fittingly named Eponyms, an app that lets providers, residents and students look up the meaning of around 1,700 eponymous medical terms. The company also makes a full-feature version that’s free for students.
MicroMedx
Company: Truven Health Analytics (formerly Thomson Reuters)
Cost: Free
Version: 1.44
Last updated: Dec. 17, 2012
Works on: iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and Android
From ACE Inhibitor to Zanaflex, Truven Health’s free app gives comprehensive, up-to-date information on drugs, listing side effects and even separate FDA-labeled and off-label indications. “It’s a quick and easy way to (look up drug effects),” Honeyman-Buck said, “so you don’t have to pick up a physician’s desk reference which weighs a ton and probably is outdated.” MicroMedx also makes a more detailed drug-interaction app and another on IV compatibility, both of which retail for $9.99.
Calculate
Company: QxMD Software Inc.
Cost: Free
Version: 2.9.3
Last updated: Oct. 15, 2012
Works on: iPhone, iPad, BlackBerry and Android
A free clinical calculator and decision support tool that helps doctors determine prognosis, reckon doses for different agents (like chemotherapy drugs), figure out ideal body weight and BMI, and estimate due date and gestation age. “It calculates formulas that doctors need,” Honeyman-Buck said.
MonsterAnatomy
Company: Monster Minds Media SAS
Cost: 18.99
Version: Varies
Last updated: Varies
OS: iPhone and iPad
Developed at a French hospital’s imaging department, Monster Anatomy is an interactive atlas of MRI images that’s sold in two parts: one for lower, the other for upper limbs, each costing $18.99. Monster Anatomy HD-Lower Limb consists of 384 contiguous MRI slices, while its upper limb counterpart has 502 contiguous slices. In his recent AJR article, Richardson called these imaging packs “two of the most useful medical apps that I own.” Monster Minds also distributes a free version of the lower limb with 82 knee slices called Monster Anatomy Lite - Knee.
Viewbox
Company: Viewbox Holdings LLC
Cost: $2.99
Version: 1.1
Last updated: March 6, 2012
Works on: iPad
Stanford University made headlines two years ago when it announced all incoming first year medical students would be given an iPad. For the 2012-2013 academic year, the Palo Alto, Calif.-based university changed its practice somewhat, and is now giving a stipend to buy the tablets. Still, the top-tier university’s commitment to tablets makes sense, and partly that’s because students and residents can be helped with their educational needs by teaching apps like Viewbox, a program that lets learners organize, search, view and share medical images for educational purposes.
Journals and Meetings:
RSNA Suite
Cost: (The apps are generally free, but you need to subscribe to the journals to access them)
Version: Varies
Last updated: Varies
Works on: iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and Android
The Radiological Society of North America has made a hard push for mobile. At its November 2012 meeting in Chicago, the RSNA even featured a Mobile Connect lounge where staff gave one-on-one help to members to get programs loaded onto their devices. The society offers several apps: its high-level RSNA Mobile Connect, which lets you plan the annual RSNA meeting and also gives you access to all its publications; separate apps for its peer-reviewed journals, Radiology and RadioGraphics; and RSNA News, its news service.
Journal of Digital Imaging
Company: Springer Science +
Business Media, LLC
Cost: Free (for now)
Version: 1.0
Last updated: Jan. 2, 2013
Works on: iPhone, iPad, iPod touch and Android
Fittingly, starting this year, the Journal of Digital Imaging, the peer-reviewed journal put out by the Society of Imaging Informatics, can now be read on your mobile phone. Best of all, the journal’s app is free through the end of March. “It’s open to everybody,” Honeyman-Buck, the journal’s editor, said. If you’re curious, SIIM itself doesn’t have an app yet, but Honeyman-Buck said it’s something they’re working on. “I’m hoping we’ll have one out by our annual meeting in June,” she said.
Shameless plug:DOTmed’s favorite app can be found on the app store, search term: DOTmed
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