LV1 Troubleshooting
How to recover from “Error 11” popup.
LV1 Refresher Training
RMT Telepathology
Steps:
Next Steps:
First, consider:
Because Slide Scanning staff can access digital slide content with a direct connection to the server, which end users cannot, we see folders just as you would see them in a standard Windows File Explorer interface. When instructed to create specific folders for specific purposes, we do so. Absent specific instructions, we follow past practices based on the use case indicated to us through the slide scan request form.
Available Interfaces for Viewing Slides
Examples of Specific Applications
I'm showing Pathology Images at a Michigan Medicine Tumor Board conference."
Slides scanned for tumor boards are assigned to a dated web page within the "Tumor Boards" section of the Pathology Clinical Lab Portal. A screenshot from the main interface is shown below. Note: not all conferences have shown here.
Simply click the appropriate date and a list of cases will appear. Each case will have a link to the Pathology report next to the last name. To open all case images at once, click the last name. To open a single slide, click the stain name.
You may select the modality for displaying the scanned images. "ImageScope" is the vendor's software and must be installed locally on the workstation. "WebScope" will open the images within your web browser.
I would like to show some scanned images for an educational conference, such as unknowns for Pathology residents.
You will also utilize the "Tumor Boards" interface. When entering the scan request, choose "Didactic" for "Group." You then have several options. Choose the conference name that best fits your purpose.
After selecting a Conference name, click in the "Date" field and click the day you wish to designate for the conference. Proceed with filling out the remainder of the form as usual. When the slides are scanned, you will be notified. Look for them under the appropriate conference name within the Tumor Boards section of the Portal (see above). Click the date you requested in the form.
I need to share my images with a collaborator / colleague outside U-M.
Please contact Digital Pathology directly for these kinds of requests. Slides shared with persons or groups outside U-M will necessarily need to be on a server with a public IP. Therefore they must be de-identified to remove any protected health information (PHI) You may email slidescanningserv@med.umich.edu or phone 4-4003.
I am with a research laboratory.
In the past, we have steered our research lab colleagues to the eSlide Manager picture-archive database for viewing their slides. We now recommend to all new research clients that they receive copies of their digital slides that they can save on their own platforms. This is for two reasons - 1) eSlide Manager is less user-friendly than other programs and 2) many researchers are looking to perform image analysis on whole-slide images, which cannot be done through eSM. When you indicate "Research" in the "Group" field, you will be required to indicate via the "radio button" icon your preference for viewing your slides. "MBox or Dropbox" is most frequently chosen.
NOTE:
Clients that elect to receive copies of their .svs files can open them using the freeware ImageScope. With ImageScope, clients can extract jpg images suitable for PowerPoint presentations, posters, and publications. Multiple images can be compared simultaneously. Areas of interest can be annotated with arrows, shape tools, and labels for downstream presentation or teaching purposes. Finally, as of March 2022, there is no Mac-compatible version of ImageScope software. An alternative, Mac-compatible product is "QuPath." Link here: https://qupath.github.io/
At this time there is not a Macintosh-compatible version of ImageScope software available. There is, however, a Mac-compatible program on GitHub called "QuPath ." QuPath is designed for the analysis of whole-slide images. Feedback from investigators indicates that it takes some time to learn how to use it, but it is a powerful tool.
The sharing of scanned histology images is an important capability of digital pathology. The Slide Scanning Service will assist individual faculty members with the sharing of slide images on a case-by-case basis. Please contact us for further information.
The SVS files that are generated from the scanning process are not “simple” image files. They in fact contain multiple images (label image, overall slide thumbnail) and an information layer. Therefore they cannot be opened in standard image-editing software such as Adobe Photoshop or Adobe Illustrator.
A software program called Digital Slide Studio can save SVS files as TIFF or JPG. I can guide the Michigan Medicine Department of Pathology faculty and staff through its use upon request. However, users should be advised that the process can be time-consuming and the end result may be an image file that is equal or larger in size to the SVS file at the outset. Compressing the image is possible but will result in a loss of ability to zoom to high magnification. Retaining appreciable levels of detail within the image will still result in an image file that is dozens or hundreds of megabytes in size.
Users are encouraged to employ ImageScope to capture TIFF or JPG images that can be used in downstream publications or presentations.
Follow these steps:
The move of the Slide Scanning Service to the new NCRC location in July 2018, positioned our department for growth in Digital Pathology. However, it also poses some challenges to researchers who utilize our services: firstly, slides must now travel to NCRC to be scanned. Secondly, enhanced security was one of the principal goals of the Pathology Department's new space design; as a consequence, U-M staff and faculty cannot access the Pathology workspace without appropriate ID badge permissions.
Therefore, researchers and others who need slides scanned are invited to use Pathology's contracted courier service, which transports specimens to and from NCRC on an hourly basis.
Courier Service Instructions
Driving and Parking Directions for our NCRC Location
Occasionally it will be necessary for a client to visit us in person. This can happen if the client is not part of Michigan Medicine and cannot access the slide scan request form, or for other reasons. A map of our location is provided below. You may leave or pick up your slides from the box in the photo below the map.
PLEASE NOTE: You must alert Digital Pathology that slides have been dropped off by sending an email to slidescanningserv@med.umich.edu.