
Sante DICOM Editor displays and modifies medical pictures using the DICOM protocol. This is serious software; not everyone need it, but I recall using it once when I had the photographs at hand. It’s a fantastic resource for radiologists, medical students, and professionals who need to work with CT, MRI, X-ray, mammography, ultrasound, and other imaging data. It is compatible with all equipment manufacturers and all DICOM and NEMA 2 file formats.
You can download Sante DICOM Editor for free with the activation key provided below.

Features:
- It combines a viewer, editor, and workstation. You may measure, annotate, use image processing filters, change titles, and eliminate frames.
- Editing is deep; even sequence properties can be modified, and all files in a series or study can be edited at the same time, rather than one by one.
- The built-in Dicomizer allows you to create DICOM files from photos and movies; reverse conversion is also supported.
- It is worth noting that the program is a PACS client that supports all DICOM network services and can function as a PACS mini-server.
- The storage restriction is merely the capacity of your drive, allowing you to store massive amounts of research.
- A built-in anonymizer that strips patient data from files ensures confidentiality.
- Supports two monitors, prints on DICOM and ordinary printers, and is compatible with any character system, including Cyrillic and Arabic.
As a substitute, I’d propose RadiAnt DICOM Viewer, a quick and easy viewer with good graphics and a straightforward UI. However, it is only a viewer; its editing skills are far from those of Sante. MicroDicom, which is free for non-commercial use, does a good job with viewing and basic measurements, but it lacks PACS server functionality and batch editing.

