Patents by Inventor John Stroebel

John Stroebel has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20080015649
    Abstract: A pacing mode is provided, in one embodiment, that permits missed or skipped ventricular beats. The mode monitors a full cardiac cycle (A-A interval) for the presence of intrinsic ventricular activity. If ventricular activity is present, a flag is set that is valid for the next cardiac cycle. At the beginning of the next cardiac cycle, the device determines if the flag is present. So long as the flag is present, the device will not deliver a ventricular pacing pulse in that cycle, even if there is no intrinsic ventricular activity. If there is no flag present at the start of a given cardiac cycle, a ventricular pacing pulse is delivered and this ventricular activity sets a flag for the subsequent cardiac cycle.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 3, 2007
    Publication date: January 17, 2008
    Inventor: John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20070213777
    Abstract: Pacing parameters are provided to address cross talk and intrinsic ventricular events occurring within a predefined blanking period following an atrial event. The parameters are used in conjunction with protocol for minimizing or reducing ventricular pacing, wherein ignoring intrinsic ventricular events during the blanking period might otherwise affect the performance of the protocol.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 15, 2007
    Publication date: September 13, 2007
    Inventors: Robert Betzold, David Casavant, Paul Belk, Thomas Mullen, John Stroebel, Steven Hornberger, Todd Sheldon, Douglas Peterson
  • Publication number: 20070203525
    Abstract: A pacing mode is provided, in one embodiment, that permits missed or skipped ventricular beats. The mode monitors a full cardiac cycle (A-A interval) for the presence of intrinsic ventricular activity. If ventricular activity is present, a flag is set that is valid for the next cardiac cycle. At the beginning of the next cardiac cycle, the device determines if the flag is present. So long as the flag is present, the device will not deliver a ventricular pacing pulse in that cycle, even if there is no intrinsic ventricular activity. If there is no flag present at the start of a given cardiac cycle, a ventricular pacing pulse is delivered and this ventricular activity sets a flag for the subsequent cardiac cycle.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 5, 2007
    Publication date: August 30, 2007
    Inventor: John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20070060963
    Abstract: A preferred atrial-based pacing method and apparatus is provided using an intelligent cardiac pacing system to having the ability to continue atrial-based pacing as long as relatively reliable AV conduction is present. In the event that such relatively reliable AV conduction is not present, mode switching to a DDD/R or a DDI/R pacing mode while continually biased to mode switch back to atrial-based pacing. The standard or relatively reliable AV conduction may be changed either automatically or manually. This increases pacing that utilizes natural AV conduction however possible so as to gain all the benefits of cardiac contractile properties resulting therefrom, while tolerating the occasional missed ventricular depolarization (i.e., non-conducted P-wave). In the event where relatively reliable AV conduction is not present, the pacing mode is switched to a DDD/R mode while detecting a return of the relatively reliable AV conduction (and resulting mode switch to preferred atrial based pacing).
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 17, 2006
    Publication date: March 15, 2007
    Inventors: David Casavant, Paul Belk, Thomas Mullen, John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20070060965
    Abstract: An ADI/R mode is implemented using an intelligent pacing system to continually monitor ventricular response. This ensures AV conduction whenever possible so as to gain all the benefits of cardiac contractile properties resulting from native R-waves. In the event where AV conduction is blocked, the pacing mode is switched to a DDD/R mode to ensure a paced R-wave. Thereafter, subsequent to a completed interval of a p-wave, ADI/R pacing resumes to monitor ventricular response.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 31, 2006
    Publication date: March 15, 2007
    Inventors: David Casavant, Paul Belk, Thomas Mullen, John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20070060964
    Abstract: An ADI/R mode is implemented using an intelligent pacing system to continually monitor ventricular response. This ensures AV conduction whenever possible so as to gain all the benefits of cardiac contractile properties resulting from native R-waves. In the event where AV conduction is blocked, the pacing mode is switched to a DDD/R mode to ensure a paced R-wave. Thereafter, subsequent to a completed interval of a p-wave, ADI/R pacing resumes to monitor ventricular response.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 31, 2006
    Publication date: March 15, 2007
    Inventors: David Casavant, Paul Belk, Thomas Mullen, John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20070005113
    Abstract: A preferred atrial-based pacing method and apparatus is provided using an intelligent cardiac pacing system to having the ability to continue atrial-based pacing as long as relatively reliable AV conduction is present. In the event that such relatively reliable AV conduction is not present, mode switching to a DDD/R or a DDI/R pacing mode while continually biased to mode switch back to atrial-based pacing. The standard or relatively reliable AV conduction may be changed either automatically or manually. This increases pacing that utilizes natural AV conduction however possible so as to gain all the benefits of cardiac contractile properties resulting therefrom, while tolerating the occasional missed ventricular depolarization (i.e., non-conducted P-wave). In the event where relatively reliable AV conduction is not present, the pacing mode is switched to a DDD/R mode while detecting a return of the relatively reliable AV conduction (and resulting mode switch to preferred atrial based pacing).
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 29, 2006
    Publication date: January 4, 2007
    Inventors: David Casavant, Paul Belk, Thomas Mullen, John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20060149328
    Abstract: The invention provides methods and apparatus for determining in a non-tracking pacing mode (e.g., DDI/R, VVI/R) whether a ventricular pacing stimulus is capturing a paced ventricle, including some or all of the following aspects. For example, increasing a ventricular pacing rate a nominal amount to an overdrive pacing rate higher than a most recent heart rate and evaluating a conduction interval from a first pacing ventricle to a second sensing ventricle and then continuing to monitor the underlying rate to ensure that a threshold testing pacing rate will not exceed a predetermined minimum interval and providing pacing stimulation to the first ventricle and sensing the second ventricle to determine whether the pacing stimulation to the first ventricle was one of sub-threshold and supra-threshold. The methods and apparatus are especially useful in conjunction with ensuring actual delivery of a ventricular pacing regime (e.g., cardiac resynchronization therapy or “CRT”).
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 20, 2005
    Publication date: July 6, 2006
    Inventors: Purvee Parikh, John Stroebel, Todd Sheldon, Karen Kleckner
  • Publication number: 20060079942
    Abstract: The invention relates to medical devices such as pacemakers, pulse generators, cardioverter-defibrillators and the like and more particularly relates to modular and reconfigurable medical system platforms and methods of designing, testing, controlling and implementing diverse therapies, diagnostics, physiologic sensors and related instrumentation using said medical system platforms. Methods, systems and devices provide a new design platform for implantable and external medical devices such as pacemakers, defibrillators, neurostimulators, heart monitors, etc. A real-time, highly flexible system of software and hardware modules enables both prototypes and products to respond to patient and customer needs with greater design and manufacturing efficiency. Certain embodiments integrate a general-purpose processor with interface circuitry to provide a standard platform for implementing new and conventional therapies with software models rather than custom circuitry.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 28, 2005
    Publication date: April 13, 2006
    Inventors: D. Deno, Jeffrey Wilkinson, John Stroebel
  • Publication number: 20050055059
    Abstract: Pacing parameters are provided to address cross talk and intrinsic ventricular events occurring within a predefined blanking period following an atrial event. The parameters are used in conjunction with protocol for minimizing or reducing ventricular pacing, wherein ignoring intrinsic ventricular events during the blanking period might otherwise affect the performance of the protocol.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 21, 2004
    Publication date: March 10, 2005
    Inventors: Robert Betzold, David Casavant, Paul Belk, Thomas Mullen, John Stroebel
  • Patent number: D999780
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 29, 2021
    Date of Patent: September 26, 2023
    Assignee: CVRx, Inc.
    Inventors: John Stroebel, Morgan Beeson, Yifei Yao, Robert L. Davidson, Bart Carey, Cliff Rockwell, Al Crouse
  • Patent number: D999781
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 29, 2021
    Date of Patent: September 26, 2023
    Assignee: CVRx, Inc.
    Inventors: John Stroebel, Morgan Beeson, Yifei Yao, Robert L. Davidson, Bart Carey, Cliff Rockwell, Al Crouse
  • Patent number: D1000461
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 29, 2021
    Date of Patent: October 3, 2023
    Assignee: CVRx, Inc.
    Inventors: John Stroebel, Morgan Beeson, Yifei Yao, Robert L. Davidson, Bart Carey, Cliff Rockwell, Al Crouse
  • Patent number: D1000462
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 29, 2021
    Date of Patent: October 3, 2023
    Assignee: CVRx, Inc.
    Inventors: John Stroebel, Morgan Beeson, Yifei Yao, Robert L. Davidson, Bart Carey, Cliff Rockwell, Al Crouse