| Literature DB >> 22616027 |
Seung Park1, Anil Parwani, Mahadev Satyanarayanan, Liron Pantanowitz.
Abstract
Handheld computing has had many applications in medicine, but relatively few in pathology. Most reported uses of handhelds in pathology have been limited to experimental endeavors in telemedicine or education. With recent advances in handheld hardware and software, along with concurrent advances in whole-slide imaging (WSI), new opportunities and challenges have presented themselves. This review addresses the current state of handheld hardware and software, provides a history of handheld devices in medicine focusing on pathology, and presents future use cases for such handhelds in pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Education; WSI; handhelds; smartphones; tablets
Year: 2012 PMID: 22616027 PMCID: PMC3352621 DOI: 10.4103/2153-3539.95127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol Inform
Figure 1Comparison of modern smartphones (images courtesy Palm, Motorola, Apple, and Samsung). (a) Palm Pre, a vertical slider phone running HP webOS; (b) Motorola Droid, a horizontal slider phone running Google Android; (c) Samsung Focus, a slate phone running Microsoft Windows Phone 7; (D) Apple iPhone 4S, a slate phone running Apple iOS
Comparison of 3G and 4G technologies in the United States[11,12]
Comparison of some modern handheld (phone) screens
Comparison of some modern handheld (tablet) screens
Figure 2Microscopic images taken through a microscope eyepiece objective using an Apple iPhone 4 (image courtesy of Dr. Milon Amin, UPMC). (a) pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor (H and E); (b) squamous cell carcinoma (H and E); (c) normal glomerulus (Jones Silver)