DCM to FIG conversion is the process of transforming medical or imaging data stored in DCM (DICOM) files into FIG (Xfig/FIG) vector/figure format so the visual content can be used in illustration, annotation, or diagramming workflows. This conversion extracts raster image frames or embedded pixel data from the DICOM container and exports them into FIG-compatible drawings or embedded bitmap objects, preserving scale and metadata where possible.
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Read guide →Drag your .DCM file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .fig as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .FIG file once ready.
DCM files typically use the application/dicom MIME type and contain medical images encoded with various imaging codecs. FIG files use the application/x-fig MIME type and store vector graphics data in a format compatible with Xfig and other illustration tools. Conversion involves extracting image data from DCM and translating it into scalable FIG vector elements.
The FIG (.FIG) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like DCM.
While specific technical details aren't available here, FIG files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Convert your DCM files to FIG format effortlessly using our online DCM to FIG converter. Designed for seamless and accurate conversions, our tool supports quick processing without the need for software installation. Whether you’re a designer or a medical professional, converting DCM to FIG is now simpler than ever.
DCM files are primarily used for storing medical imaging data in the DICOM format, containing complex metadata and image layers. FIG files, on the other hand, are vector graphic files designed for editing and scalable illustrations. While DCM focuses on medical imaging, FIG is optimized for graphic design and visualization.
Keep individual DCM frame exports under 10–20 MB for faster processing and smoother vector tracing; very large images can slow conversion or produce huge FIG files.
To preserve diagnostic detail, export at higher DPI (300+) and avoid aggressive compression; use embedded bitmap FIG if pixel-perfect fidelity is required.
When converting to vector FIG, enable manual or semi-automatic tracing and review vector paths—automatic tracing can simplify details and lose subtle grayscale information.
For batch conversion, group series into consistent frame sizes and naming conventions; convert in batches of 10–50 files to reduce memory spikes and allow resumable jobs.
This online converter made switching from DCM to FIG so simple and fast.
Emily R.
Graphic Designer
The tool helped me visualize medical images better in FIG format.
Michael S.
Radiologist
Reliable and easy to use, highly recommend for converting DCM files.
Anna L.
Engineer
Start your free DCM to FIG conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Format limitation: FIG is primarily a vector/illustration format and may not retain DICOM-specific metadata (patient IDs, study tags) or multi-frame timing information in the FIG output.