Miele-LXIV 17+

DICOM Workstation and Viewer

Alex Bettarini

    • 4.5 • 94 Ratings
    • $29.99

Screenshots

Description

Miele-LXIV is a DICOM workstation, viewer and more. The project started in November 2014 as a fork of the popular open source 32-bit project OsiriX, but it has been modified to become a 64-bit application and to remove many of the limitations of the 32-bit version.

- Built for macOS 10.14 through 14.4
- It supports Mojave's Dark Mode
- Using VTK version 9.3.0
- Using ITK version 5.2.1
- Using DCMTK version 3.6.7
- Using OpenGL 4.1
- Using GLEW 2.2.0
- Using OpenJPEG 2.5.0
- Using David Clunie's DICOM validator dciodvfy version 1.00.snapshot.20230403092834
- Fully localized for 7 languages: Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Spanish
- Export to Photos
- Own plugin system fully operational: develop, publish, list, check-for-updates, download, install
- Open source
- Universal binary: Intel, Apple Silicon

What’s New

Version 9.40

Fix issue 116 PET fusion
Using GLEW

Ratings and Reviews

4.5 out of 5
94 Ratings

94 Ratings

Whooleeoh ,

Work in progress...

Years ago (like 10 maybe? I’m blessed w ADHD so I have absolutely no concept of time) I had downloaded that OsiriX when it was free & was viewing all my MRI’s, etc.
then I was living in the woods for 4 yrs (long story, another adventure) & when I finally got to a place where I could use my old G4 the app was bad. They had one you could buy but my experience w the free one was so poor that there was no way I was going to buy it.
Recently I had more X-rays & decided to try looking at them after the VA gave me a disc. I saw that it included OsiriX Lite. I decided to look in the app store & voila, this beautiful little app which not only worked great (so far) but it’s entirely free to boot!
I’m giving it 4 stars bc it’s still got some quirks. However, I no longer have to worry about buying OsiriX, which I wouldn’t do anyways bc when you’re living on an extremely limited fixed income, such niceties become even more extremely difficult to justify even a penny to it,
Anyways it does for the most part what it says it does & I’m sure most of the quirks I encountered were due to my lack of experience w the app. However, rest assured I will be putting it to the test as I have a plethora (can you say “plethora”?) of discs w X-rays, CT’s. MRI’s & CT myelograms to look at. Perhaps I will chg it to a 5 afterwards.

phil321897 ,

I am a radiologist

This product is the continuation of Osirix, which was my go-to imaging program for Mac in years past. The program is Robust, it has every tool you would want, It can be used for professional use - i.e. actual formal reading of scans.
Pro tip - I keep all of our family's images. Hospitals dispose of them in 3-5 years, and having old scans for comparision is vital when something pops up. The question always is "Was that there 10 years ago?" Always get a CD of your images - the hospital should, and must give these to you. Yes - you will have to ask/edmand them. Do it.
This program willl allow you to compare old scans. Today, I compared my wife's images to some we got 20 years ago.

DHP0906 ,

The Software I've Been Looking for!!!

I build surgical case studies using all kinds of different CD's with .dcm files.

On Windows, my go to has been Radiant. I have struggled for a long time to find something close to this for the Mac.

This program exceeds my expectations. I would gladly pay for it because of all its features.

App Privacy

The developer, Alex Bettarini, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy.

Data Not Collected

The developer does not collect any data from this app.

Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More

Supports

  • Family Sharing

    Up to six family members can use this app with Family Sharing enabled.