Patents Assigned to Biophysical Mind Technologies, Ltd.
  • Patent number: 7610095
    Abstract: A method and a Cranial Electrical Stimulator CES for operation in a diagnosis, treatment, research, and test mode related to brain disorders, namely to mental disorders, and to neurological disorders, such as migraine and epilepsy, are disclosed. Diagnosis is based on a detected condition of passage of an electric signal via a pathway in the brain defined as passing from a first to a second electrode of a pair of electrodes from an array attached to the skull of a patient. Treatment is achieved by injecting a treatment signal in the pathway detected as having a condition. A practitioner operates a workstation of the CES that controls a signal and routing box SRB generating input signals and receiving output signal from the brain, via the skull and electrodes. The PC of the workstation controls signal input, output reception, measurement, display and storage in memory.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 10, 2006
    Date of Patent: October 27, 2009
    Assignee: Biophysical Mind Technologies, Ltd.
    Inventor: Yakov Naisberg
  • Patent number: 7239919
    Abstract: A method and a Cranial Electrical Stimulator CES (4) for operation in a diagnosis, treatment, research, and test mode related to mental disorder, are disclosed. Diagnosis is based on a detected condition of passage of an electric signal via a pathway in the brain defined as passing from a first to a second electrode of a pair of electrodes from an array (12) attached to the skull (6) of a patient. Treatment is achieved by injecting a treatment signal in the pathway detected as having a condition. A practitioner (2) operates a workstation (8) of the CES (4) that controls a signal and routing box SRB (10) generating input signals and receiving output signal from the brain, via the skull (6) and electrodes (12). The PC (14) of the workstation controls signal input, output reception, measurement, display and storage in memory (15).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 23, 2002
    Date of Patent: July 3, 2007
    Assignee: Biophysical Mind Technologies, Ltd.
    Inventors: Yakov Naisberg, Avraham Weizman, Alexander Grinshpoon
  • Publication number: 20060259094
    Abstract: A method and a Cranial Electrical Stimulator CES for operation in a diagnosis, treatment, research, and test mode related to brain disorders, namely to mental disorders, and to neurological disorders, such as migraine and epilepsy, are disclosed. Diagnosis is based on a detected condition of passage of an electric signal via a pathway in the brain defined as passing from a first to a second electrode of a pair of electrodes from an array attached to the skull of a patient. Treatment is achieved by injecting a treatment signal in the pathway detected as having a condition. A practitioner operates a workstation of the CES that controls a signal and routing box SRB generating input signals and receiving output signal from the brain, via the skull and electrodes. The PC of the workstation controls signal input, output reception, measurement, display and storage in memory.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 10, 2006
    Publication date: November 16, 2006
    Applicant: BIOPHYSICAL MIND TECHNOLOGIES, LTD.
    Inventors: Yakov Naisberg, Avraham Weizman, Alexander Grinshpoon
  • Publication number: 20040138720
    Abstract: A method and a Cranial Electrical Stimulator CES (4) for operation in a diagnosis, treatment, research, and test mode related to mental disorder, are disclosed. Diagnosis is based on a detected condition of passage of an electric signal via a pathway in the brain defined as passing from a first to a second electrode of a pair of electrodes from an array (12) attached to the skull (6) of a patient. Treatment is achieved by injecting a treatment signal in the pathway detected as having a condition.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 24, 2003
    Publication date: July 15, 2004
    Applicant: Biophysical Mind Technologies, LTD
    Inventors: Yacov Naisberg, Avraham Weizman, Alexander Grinsphoon