Patents Assigned to Resolution Medical, Inc.
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Publication number: 20050182336Abstract: Devices, systems, and methods for localizing and/or treating arrhythmias of a patient's heart, which are particularly useful for localizing focal atrial fibrillation, allow locating arrhythmogenic regions of a chamber of the heart using heart cycle signals measured from a body surface of the patient. Non-invasive localization of the ectopic origin or exit site allows focal, circular, and/or perimeter treatment to be directed so as to inhibit complex arrhythmias without having to rely on wide-spread and time consuming sequential searches and/or on massively invasive simultaneous electrocardial sensors. The invention recognizes that effective localization of these complex arrhythmias can be significantly enhanced by techniques and structures which separate heart cycle signals originating from differing chambers and/or regions of the heart tissue.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 19, 2004Publication date: August 18, 2005Applicant: Resolution Medical, Inc.Inventor: Arne Sippens Groenewegen
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Publication number: 20040138574Abstract: Methods and apparatus for enhancing diagnosis of myocardial infarctions generally compare cardiac data from multiple-lead ECG devices with similar stored data for previous patients with cardiac ischemia. Generally, data from between about 30 and about 130 leads is used to construct body surface maps of multiple patients and those maps are sorted and stored based on presence of ischemia, location of ischemia, size of ischemia and/or the like, for each patient. When a new patient is then evaluated with a multiple-lead ECG, data from that patient can be compared with stored data from the previous patients and the new-patient data can be matched to similar stored data. Thus, characteristics about the new patient's ischemia can be determined, such as presence, location and/or size of a myocardial infarction. The ECG device may be deployed as a set of panels to be applied to the patient, and a display device may be provided to a physician for enhanced diagnosis.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 16, 2003Publication date: July 15, 2004Applicant: Resolution Medical, Inc.Inventors: Arne Sippens Groenewegen, Omar Amirana, Terrance Ransbury, G. Scott Dentino
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Patent number: 6760620Abstract: Devices, systems, and methods for localizing and/or treating arrhythmias of a patient's heart, which are particularly useful for localizing focal atrial fibrillation, allow locating arrhythmogenic regions of a chamber of the heart using heart cycle signals measured from a body surface of the patient. Non-invasive localization of the ectopic origin or exit site allows focal, circular, and/or perimeter treatment to be directed so as to inhibit complex arrhythmias without having to rely on wide-spread and time consuming sequential searches and/or on massively invasive simultaneous electrocardial sensors. The invention recognizes that effective localization of these complex arrhythmias can be significantly enhanced by techniques and structures which separate heart cycle signals originating from differing chambers and/or regions of the heart tissue.Type: GrantFiled: March 14, 2001Date of Patent: July 6, 2004Assignee: Resolution Medical, Inc.Inventor: Arne Sippens Groenewegen
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Publication number: 20040015194Abstract: Improved systems, devices, and methods sense heart signals through a torso surface of a patient. These improved systems facilitate mounting of an array of sensors upon the patient's torso by supporting the sensor arrays on one or more panels. Four separate panels can be adapted for engaging the torso surface, with the four panels supporting most and/or all of the sensors necessary for localizing an arrhythmia within a chamber of a heart of a patient. The panels may have integrated components for use with other electrophysiology lab equipment such as cardiac imagers, defibrillation power sources, therapeutic probes, standard 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) systems, and the like. An exemplary arrhythmia sensing system is adapted for use in the high-noise environment of an electrophysiology lab includes a series of powered circuits distributed among the electrodes of the array.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 10, 2003Publication date: January 22, 2004Applicant: RESOLUTION MEDICAL, INC.Inventors: Terrance Ransbury, Arne Sippens Groenewegen
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Patent number: 6658285Abstract: Systems, devices, and methods localize and/or treat arrhythmias of a heart of a patient using signals sensed at an accessible body surface. Based on a database of known heart signals and associated ectopic origin sites or exit sites for treatment guidance, continuous localization identifies candidate ectopic or exit sites throughout a continuous region of tissue. An integral from a selected time interval of a reference heart cycle can be compared statistically with known body surface maps. Statistical interpolation can identify a candidate ectopic or exit site which is different than the known ectopic or exit sites. Relative localization provides accurate site identification from one or more known pacing sites (and the associated heart signals) taken from the patient.Type: GrantFiled: March 14, 2001Date of Patent: December 2, 2003Assignee: Resolution Medical, Inc.Inventors: Mark Potse, Andre Linnenbank, Arne Sippens Groenewegen, Cornelis Grimbergen
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Patent number: 6584343Abstract: Improved systems, devices, and methods sense heart signals through a torso surface of a patient. These improved systems facilitate mounting of an array of sensors upon the patient's torso by supporting the sensor arrays on one or more panels. Four separate panels can be adapted for engaging the torso surface, with the four panels supporting most and/or all of the sensors necessary for localizing an arrhythmia within a chamber of a heart of a patient. The panels may have integrated components for use with other electrophysiology lab equipment such as cardiac imagers, defibrillation power sources, therapeutic probes, standard 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) systems, and the like. An exemplary arrhythmia sensing system is adapted for use in the high-noise environment of an electrophysiology lab includes a series of powered circuits distributed among the electrodes of the array.Type: GrantFiled: July 6, 2000Date of Patent: June 24, 2003Assignee: Resolution Medical, Inc.Inventors: Terrance Ransbury, Arne Sippens Groenewegen