Application analysis of veterinary B-ultrasound image processing workstation
Veterinary B-ultrasound has improved the observation conditions of images. The newly added color display system fully considers the observation habits during diagnosis in the color coding method and adopts a combination method that is suitable for veterinary clinical diagnosis. Therefore, its color changes are natural, rich, layered, and three-dimensional, which can make veterinary diagnosis observation less laborious and less tiring.
In actual veterinary clinical diagnosis, black and white and color veterinary B-ultrasound image displays can be used for comparative observation, which plays a complementary role.
The image processing function of veterinary B-ultrasound machine has been added.
(1) The five major and forty-item image processing functions provided by the workstation can be used to analyze and process the diagnosed veterinary B-ultrasound images, realizing the quantitative analysis of veterinary B-ultrasound images.
(2) The storage function can be used to establish image disk files for sick animals, timely follow up the entire treatment process, provide veterinary B-ultrasound image analysis results, and explain the treatment effect. The disk storage function can also be used to carry out examinations for healthy animals and establish phased medical image files.
Improved clinical diagnosis rate, because the original ordinary veterinary B-ultrasound machine has been added with a color image display and image processing workstation, which has completely changed the clinical diagnosis conditions and quality of veterinary medicine. Veterinarians can easily use omnidirectional roaming color scales and color continuous adjustable veterinary B-ultrasound image processing functions to effectively and accurately observe, diagnose and quantitatively analyze. Even small animal lesions and weak echo information are not easily missed, thus greatly improving the diagnosis rate and winning precious time for sick animals.
link: https://www.bxlimage.com/nw/198.html
tags: veterinary B-ultrasound