Patents Represented by Attorney Grady J. Michael Best & Friedrich LLP Frenchick
  • Patent number: 6113576
    Abstract: A thrombolysis catheter system having a fixed length infusion zone is disclosed. The invention contemplates apparatus, method and kit aspects. The apparatus, which has the capability to track a guidewire, uses a multilumen catheter to deliver radially thrombolytic agent to an infusion zone defined by one or more balloon means. In one aspect, with an occluder means, a primary lumen of the catheter is used both for catheter placement and delivery of fluid. The method discloses utilization of radiopaque indicia to place the catheter in proximity to the occlusion or diseased tissue to be treated. The kit includes a catheter of the invention in conjunction with a steerable guidewire and a tip occluder wire, either or both of the tip occluder wire and the guidewire having an enlargement on their distal tip which cooperates with a reduced diameter portion of the catheter lumen.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 1993
    Date of Patent: September 5, 2000
    Assignee: Lake Region Manufacturing, Inc.
    Inventors: Creg W. Dance, Steven L. Olson
  • Patent number: 6069230
    Abstract: A process for pro and purifying peptides and for producing peptide/protein antigens for antibody production is described. The process utilizes fusion proteins and specifically fusion proteins in which the fusion protein carrier segment includes an amino acid sequence at least about 65 amino acids long and in which the amino acid sequence does not contain negative or positive charged side chains of amino acids.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 10, 1994
    Date of Patent: May 30, 2000
    Assignee: Promega Corporation
    Inventors: Mark W. Knuth, Mary Haak-Frendscho, John W. Shultz, Scott A. Lesley, Catherine E. Villars
  • Patent number: 6034135
    Abstract: The present invention provides novel dimeric cationic lipids. The present invention further provides compositions of these lipids with anionic or polyanionic macromolecules, methods for interfering with protein expression in a cell utilizing these compositions and a kit for preparing the same.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 6, 1997
    Date of Patent: March 7, 2000
    Assignee: Promega Biosciences, Inc.
    Inventors: David Aaron Schwartz, Brian Patrick Dwyer, William J. Daily, Kumar Srinivasan, Bob Dale Brown
  • Patent number: 5983130
    Abstract: An electrotransport agent delivery device for delivering a therapeutic agent through a body surface, and a method for increasing agent delivery efficiency, is provided. The device includes a current controller which delivers a pulsating electrotransport current and peak current density I.sub.max, I.sub.max being greater than a critical current density level I.sub.c above which the body exhibits a non-transitory higher agent delivery efficiency. Methods for increasing electrotransport delivery efficiency (E) of an agent through a body surface by creation of a higher agent delivery efficiency state are also provided.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 7, 1995
    Date of Patent: November 9, 1999
    Assignee: Alza Corporation
    Inventors: J. Bradley Phipps, Gary A. Lattin, Ronald P. Haak, Suneel Gupta, Felix Theeuwes
  • Patent number: 5981235
    Abstract: Solutions containing nucleic acids are treated with an alkaline protease to digest proteins such as nucleases that degrade the nucleic acids. In the isolation of nucleic acids, a biological sample containing nucleic acids is suspended in a solution containing water, buffer and chelating agent, the pH of the solution is adjusted to at least about 10 by adding a solution of sodium hydroxide and anionic detergent, an alkaline protease is incubated in the solution until nucleases are degraded, the pH of the solution is lowered to reduce activity of the alkaline protease by adding a solution having a pH between 3.5 and 4.5 and the alkaline protease is heat inactivated. Lowering of the pH may produce a cloudy solution which is cleared by centrifuging. Nucleic acids are isolated from the cleared solution by alcohol precipitation, or by using paramagnetic particles or a resin matrix containing silica particles. A chaotropic salt can be used to reversibly bind DNA to the resin matrix.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 29, 1996
    Date of Patent: November 9, 1999
    Assignee: Promega Corporation
    Inventors: John Shultz, Craig E. Smith, Douglas R. Storts, Paula Brisco, Judy Frederiksen, Susanne Selman, Josephine Grosch