Journal List > J Korean Radiol Soc > v.54(3) > 1004195

Cha, Kim, Kim, Hwang, Seo, Kim, Kim, Kim, Han, Hur, Park, Lee, Lee, and Oh: Clinical Evaluation of the JPEG2000 Compression Rate of CT and MR Images for Long Term Archiving in PACS

Abstract

Purpose

We wanted to evaluate an acceptable compression rate of JPEG2000 for long term archiving of CT and MR images in PACS.

Materials and Methods

Nine CT images and 9 MR images that had small or minimal lesions were randomly selected from the PACS at our institute. All the images are compressed with rates of 5:1, 10:1, 20:1, 40:1 and 80:1 by the JPEG2000 compression protocol. Pairs of original and compressed images were compared by 9 radiologists who were working independently. We designed a JPEG2000 viewing program for comparing two images on one monitor system for performing easy and quick evaluation. All the observers performed the comparison study twice on 5 mega pixel grey scale LCD monitors and 2 mega pixel color LCD monitors, rspectively. The PSNR (Peak Signal to Noise Ratio) values were calculated for making quantitative comparisons.

Results

On MR and CT, all the images with 5:1 compression images showed no difference from the original images by all 9 observers and only one observer could detect a image difference on one CT image for 10:1 compression on only the 5 mega pixel monitor. For the 20:1 compression rate, clinically significant image deterioration was found in 50% of the images on the 5M pixel monitor study, and in 30% of the images on the 2M pixel monitor. PSNR values larger than 44 dB were calculated for all the compressed images.

Conclusion

The clinically acceptable image compression rate for long term archiving by the JPEG2000 compression protocol is 10:1 for MR and CT, and if this is applied to PACS, it would reduce the cost and responsibility of the system.

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