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  <title>NITRC News Group Forum: surgical-navigation-example-code--ndi-3d-slicer-igstk-</title>
  <link>http://stage.nitrcce.org/forum/forum.php?forum_id=783</link>
  <description>Hi NITRC - 

Northern Digital is using open software to demonstrate new 3D trackers for neurosurgery and other applications.  See announcement below from Noby Hata and NDI.

-Steve

Dear NA-MIC community

As a part of Image Guided Therapy effort in NA-MIC, we collaborated with 
Northern Digital Inc to develop therir product demo USING Slicer and 
IGSTK. Today, they annouced its release at IGSTK's users meeting.  I was 
told that NDI will start distributing the demonstration with Slicer at 
exhibitions.

Please see their product annoucement I attached to this email. The 
annoucement can be also found at NDI's website.

http://www.ndigital.com/medical/pr-igstk3dslicer-feb2009.php


Please witness the power of open source and impact of NA-MIC there again.


Nobuhiko Hata, PhD
Brigham and Women's Hospital
www.snrlab.org





=======
NDI (Northern Digital Inc.), a world-leader in 3D measurement technology 
for medical, industrial and research applications, is pleased to 
announce they will be demonstrating how open source software can be used 
to quickly build research applications that integrate NDI technology at 
the first ever IGSTK User Group Meeting. An example of an image-guided 
needle targeting application using NDI’s Aurora System will be shown at 
the meeting taking place in Orlando, Florida, on February 7, 2009 and 
being held in conjunction with the 2009 SPIE Medical Imaging Conference. 
An 18 gauge needle containing a tiny electromagnetic sensor at its tip 
will be used to demonstrate how the needle can be displayed on a 
diagnostic image, and updated in real-time as it is manipulated to 
accurately target a lesion represented in an anatomical phantom. The 
software component of the demonstration was built using two open source 
packages specifically designed to support medical imaging and 
image-guided surgery research.

Jeff Stanley, Technical Account Manager for Medical Research at NDI 
commented, &quot;NDI continues to value our long-standing relationships with 
medical researchers in the academic community. We are pleased to show 
our support of initiatives designed to help researchers more efficiently 
develop software applications that integrate our tracking technologies. 
This work will allow new users and existing users to focus their 
energies on answering their research questions, rather than using 
valuable resources to develop the tools to get them there.&quot;

The first package used was the Image-Guided Surgery Toolkit (IGSTK), a 
project led by the Department of Radiology’s Imaging Science and 
Information Systems (ISIS) Center at Georgetown University Medical 
Center in Washington. IGSTK is an open source software toolkit, which 
provides the basic software components needed to quickly develop 
image-guided surgery applications. This project is a collaboration 
between Georgetown University, Kitware, Inc., Arizona State University, 
and SINTEF from Norway. The principal investigator of the IGSTK project 
is Dr. Kevin Cleary, Director of the ISIS Center.

The second package used was 3D Slicer, open source software for 
visualization, registration, segmentation, and quantification of medical 
data. This development effort has been enabled by the participation of 
several large scale NIH funded efforts. Principal investigators on this 
project include Dr. Ron Kikinis from the National Alliance of Medical 
Image Computing (NA-MIC), and Dr. Ferenc Jolesz from the National Center 
for Image Guided Therapy (NCIGT), both based out of the Brigham &amp; 
Women’s Hospital in Boston. Other communities involved in the 
development of the code include the NAC, BIRN and CIMIT research 
organizations.

Support for both of these open source software initiatives comes from 
several federal funding sources including the National Institutes of 
Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and 
Bioengineering (NIBIB) as well as many others. For more information 
about these projects please visit http://www.igstk.org and 
http://www.slicer.org.

For more information about NDI and their products, please visit 
http://www.ndigital.com/medical/.
About NDI

Established over 25 years ago, NDI is trusted by international leaders 
in medicine, industry and research for the accuracy and reliability of 
its measurement technology. NDI systems are used in applications from 
computer-assisted surgery to aeronautics; from quality inspection to 
human motion research. Today, the company is a world leader in advanced 
3D measurement technology. With over 14,000 installations in more than 
30 countries around the world, NDI’s success has been built on the 
ability to understand and meet the unique individual needs of customer 
applications.</description>
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