Patents by Inventor Aaron R. McCabe
Aaron R. McCabe 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).
-
Patent number: 8781578Abstract: According to certain examples, an implanted medical device is used to determine a mass attribute of a patient. The patient's phrenic nerve is stimulated, and the diaphragmatic response is measured by an accelerometer. The measured response is analyzed in certain embodiments to determine a mass attribute. This information can help in the diagnosis of, and efficient response to, edema.Type: GrantFiled: November 11, 2009Date of Patent: July 15, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, Holly Rockweiler, Jacob I. Laughner
-
Patent number: 8712524Abstract: A self-diagnostic system for an implantable cardiac device such as a pacemaker, cardioverter, or resynchronization device which utilizes a subcutaneous ECG channel is described. The subcutaneous ECG channel allows the device to, in real time and independent of the standard pacing and sensing circuitry, verify the presence of pacing spikes, chamber senses, and other device outputs and hence establish and verify device integrity.Type: GrantFiled: July 2, 2010Date of Patent: April 29, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, David J. Yonce
-
Publication number: 20140100626Abstract: An implantable cardiac device includes a sensor for sensing patient activity and detecting phrenic nerve activation. A first filter channel attenuates first frequencies of the sensor signal to produce a first filtered output. A second filter channel attenuates second frequencies of the accelerometer signal to produce a second filtered output. Patient activity is evaluated using the first filtered output and phrenic nerve activation caused by cardiac pacing is detected using the second filtered output.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 12, 2013Publication date: April 10, 2014Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, Holly E. Rockweiler, Jacob I. Laughner
-
Patent number: 8688216Abstract: Cardiac electrostimulation energy is delivered to a heart chamber of a subject according to a normal pacing mode using a set of implantable pacing electrodes. When a threshold test for the heart chamber is initiated and a sensing electrode independent from the set of pacing electrodes is unavailable for the heart chamber, cardiac electrostimulation energy is delivered to the subject according to a threshold test mode. The threshold test mode includes sensing a cardiac activity signal from a subject using a set of sensing electrodes that includes an electrode common to the set of pacing electrodes, and changing the electrostimulation energy and sensing a resulting cardiac activity signal using the set of sensing electrodes to determine the optimum electrostimulation energy for capture of the heart chamber.Type: GrantFiled: November 26, 2012Date of Patent: April 1, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: David W. Yost, Deepa Mahajan, Clayton S. Foster, Aaron R. McCabe, Shibaji Shome, Amy Jean Brisben
-
Publication number: 20140039312Abstract: Techniques are disclosed for pacing site selection. In one example, a method includes using a sensing element such as an ultrasonic transducer, an optical pressure sensor, a MEMS pressure sensor, a SAW pressure sensor, an accelerometer, a gyroscope, or any other suitable sensing element to sense a measure related to a cardiac strain in a heart resulting from contraction and relaxation of myocardium during a cardiac cycle. Based on the sensed strain, an output may be provided for use by a user of the system to select a segment of the heart for lead placement.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 30, 2013Publication date: February 6, 2014Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Holly E. Rockweiller, Rodney W. Salo, Bruce A. Tockman, Lewis J. Thomas, III, Aaron R. McCabe, Brian D. Soltis, Darrell L. Rankin, Michael S. Arney, Alex J. Sepulveda
-
Patent number: 8639317Abstract: An implantable medical device such as an implantable pacemaker or implantable cardioverter/defibrillator includes a programmable sensing circuit providing for sensing of a signal approximating a surface electrocardiogram (ECG) through implanted electrodes. With various electrode configurations, signals approximating various standard surface ECG signals are acquired without the need for attaching electrodes with cables onto the skin. The various electrode configurations include, but are not limited to, various combinations of intracardiac pacing electrodes, portions of the implantable medical device contacting tissue, and electrodes incorporated onto the surface of the implantable medical device.Type: GrantFiled: October 22, 2012Date of Patent: January 28, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, Avram Scheiner, Geng Zhang, Douglas R. Daum, Yi Zhang, Quan Ni
-
Patent number: 8634915Abstract: An implantable cardiac device includes a sensor for sensing patient activity and detecting phrenic nerve activation. A first filter channel attenuates first frequencies of the sensor signal to produce a first filtered output. A second filter channel attenuates second frequencies of the accelerometer signal to produce a second filtered output. Patient activity is evaluated using the first filtered output and phrenic nerve activation caused by cardiac pacing is detected using the second filtered output.Type: GrantFiled: May 26, 2010Date of Patent: January 21, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, Holly E. Rockweiler, Jacob L. Laughner
-
Publication number: 20140018875Abstract: An apparatus comprises a cardiac signal sensing circuit, a pacing therapy circuit, and a controller circuit. The controller circuit includes a safety margin calculation circuit. The controller circuit initiates delivery of pacing stimulation energy to the heart using a first energy level, changes the energy level by at least one of: a) increasing the energy from the first energy level until detecting that the pacing stimulation energy induces stable capture, or b) reducing the energy from the first energy level until detecting that the stimulation energy fails to induce capture, and continues changing the stimulation energy level until confirming stable capture or the failure of capture. The safety margin calculation circuit calculates a safety margin of pacing stimulation energy using at least one of a determined stability of a parameter associated with evoked response and a determined range of energy levels corresponding to stable capture or intermittent failure of capture.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 19, 2013Publication date: January 16, 2014Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Amy Jean Brisben, Shibaji Shome, Kenneth N. Hayes, Yanting Dong, Aaron R. McCabe, Scott A. Meyer, Kevin John Stalsberg
-
Publication number: 20140018878Abstract: Systems and methods for determining pacing timing intervals based on the temporal relationship between the timing of local and non-local cardiac signal features are described. A device includes a plurality of implantable electrodes electrically coupled to the heart and configured to sense local and non-local cardiac signals. Sense circuitry coupled to first and second electrode pairs senses a local cardiac signal via a first electrode pair and a non-local cardiac signal via a second electrode pair. Detection circuitry is used to detect a feature of the local signal associated with activation of a heart chamber and to detect a feature of the non-local signal associated with activation of the heart chamber. A control processor times delivery of one or more pacing pulses based on a temporal relationship between timing of the local signal feature and timing of the non-local signal feature.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 16, 2013Publication date: January 16, 2014Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers Inc.Inventors: Alok Sathaye, Aaron R. McCabe, Yinghong Yu
-
Publication number: 20140018872Abstract: An example of a system comprises a cardiac pulse generator configured to generate cardiac paces to pace the heart, a sensor configured to sense a physiological signal for use in detecting pace-induced phrenic nerve stimulation (PS), a storage, and a phrenic nerve stimulation detector. The storage is configured for use to store patient-specific PS features for PS beats with a desirably large signal-to-noise ratio. The phrenic nerve stimulation detector may be configured to detect PS features for the patient by analyzing a PS beat with a desirably large signal-to-noise ratio induced using a pacing pulse with a large energy output and store patient-specific PS features in the storage, and use the patient-specific PS features stored in the memory to detect PS beats when the heart is paced heart using cardiac pacing pulses with a smaller energy output.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 11, 2013Publication date: January 16, 2014Inventors: Krzysztof Z. Siejko, Sunipa Saha, Aaron R. McCabe, Holly Rockweiler
-
Patent number: 8626292Abstract: An implantable cardiac device includes a sensor for sensing patient respiration and detecting phrenic nerve activation. A first filter channel attenuates first frequencies of the sensor signal to produce a first filtered output. A second filter channel attenuates second frequencies of the respiration signal to produce a second filtered output. Patient activity is evaluated using the first filtered output and phrenic nerve activation caused by cardiac pacing is detected using the second filtered output.Type: GrantFiled: May 26, 2010Date of Patent: January 7, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, Holly E. Rockweiler, Jacob L. Laughner
-
Patent number: 8626276Abstract: Cardiac monitoring and/or stimulation methods and systems that provide one or more of monitoring, diagnosing, defibrillation, and pacing. Cardiac signal separation is employed to detect, monitor, track and/or trend ischemia using cardiac activation sequence information. Ischemia detection may involve sensing composite cardiac signals using implantable electrodes, and performing a signal separation that produces one or more cardiac activation signal vectors associated with one or more cardiac activation sequences. A change in the signal vector may be detected using subsequent separations. The change may be an elevation or depression of the ST segment of a cardiac cycle or other change indicative of myocardial ischemia, myocardial infarction, or other pathological change. The change may be used to predict, quantify, and/or qualify an event such as an arrhythmia, a myocardial infarction, or other pathologic change. Information associated with the vectors may be stored and used to track the vectors.Type: GrantFiled: July 30, 2010Date of Patent: January 7, 2014Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Yi Zhang, Scott A. Meyer, Jeffrey E. Stahmann, Carlos Alberto Ricci, Marina Brockway, Aaron R. McCabe, Yinghong Yu, Donald L. Hopper
-
Publication number: 20130310891Abstract: A system or apparatus can provide electrostimulations via an electrode configuration that can be selected from multiple electrode configurations, the electrostimulations of the type for inducing a desired heart contraction, or a neurostimulation response. The system or apparatus can allow communicating with an external device to receive an input indicating a degree of patient discomfort with an electrostimulation delivered using a first electrode configuration, and can associate information about the degree of discomfort with information about the corresponding first electrode configuration for use by a controller circuit in determining a second electrode configuration for delivering a subsequent electrostimulation.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 6, 2013Publication date: November 21, 2013Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Eric K. Enrooth, Sunipa Saha, Krzysztof Z. Siejko, Kenneth N. Hayes, Aaron R. McCabe
-
Patent number: 8565879Abstract: An apparatus comprises a cardiac signal sensing circuit, a pacing therapy circuit, and a controller circuit. The controller circuit includes a safety margin calculation circuit. The controller circuit initiates delivery of pacing stimulation energy to the heart using a first energy level, changes the energy level by at least one of: a) increasing the energy from the first energy level until detecting that the pacing stimulation energy induces stable capture, or b) reducing the energy from the first energy level until detecting that the stimulation energy fails to induce capture, and continues changing the stimulation energy level until confirming stable capture or the failure of capture. The safety margin calculation circuit calculates a safety margin of pacing stimulation energy using at least one of a determined stability of a parameter associated with evoked response and a determined range of energy levels corresponding to stable capture or intermittent failure of capture.Type: GrantFiled: March 25, 2011Date of Patent: October 22, 2013Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Amy Jean Brisben, Shibaji Shome, Kenneth N. Hayes, Yanting Dong, Aaron R. McCabe, Scott A. Meyer, Kevin John Stalsberg
-
Publication number: 20130253616Abstract: A neural stimulator senses a reference signal indicative of cardiac cycles each including a predetermined type timing reference event using a sensor external to the heart and blood vessels. The delivery of the neural stimulation pulses are synchronized to that timing reference event. Examples of the timing reference event include a predetermined cardiac event such as a P-wave or an R-wave detected from a subcutaneous ECG signal, a predetermined type heart sound detected from an acoustic signal, and a peak detected from a hemodynamic signal related to blood flow or pressure.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 20, 2013Publication date: September 26, 2013Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Imad Libbus, Paul A. Haefner, Aaron R. McCabe, Yi Zhang
-
Patent number: 8527048Abstract: Systems and methods for determining pacing timing intervals based on the temporal relationship between the timing of local and non-local cardiac signal features are described. A device includes a plurality of implantable electrodes electrically coupled to the heart and configured to sense local and non-local cardiac signals. Sense circuitry coupled to first and second electrode pairs senses a local cardiac signal via a first electrode pair and a non-local cardiac signal via a second electrode pair. Detection circuitry is used to detect a feature of the local signal associated with activation of a heart chamber and to detect a feature of the non-local signal associated with activation of the heart chamber. A control processor times delivery of one or more pacing pulses based on a temporal relationship between timing of the local signal feature and timing of the non-local signal feature.Type: GrantFiled: June 29, 2006Date of Patent: September 3, 2013Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Alok S. Sathaye, Aaron R. McCabe, Yinghong Yu
-
Patent number: 8521285Abstract: Methods and devices are described that allow estimation of an electrostimulation capture threshold, such as a dedicated bipolar pacing vector threshold. In an example, an equal-energy assumption between first and second pacing vectors can be used to estimate an electrostimulation capture threshold of a second pacing vector from a measured electrostimulation capture threshold of the first pacing vector and impedances of the first and second pacing vectors. In an example, a relationship between first and second pacing vectors can be determined from measured data, and a parameter of the relationship can be used with a measurement of an electrostimulation capture threshold of the first pacing vector to estimate an electrostimulation capture threshold of the second pacing vector.Type: GrantFiled: October 18, 2010Date of Patent: August 27, 2013Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Amy Jean Brisben, Aaron R. McCabe, Clayton S. Foster, David W. Yost, Kevin John Stalsberg, Jacob I. Laughner
-
Publication number: 20130197594Abstract: Various aspects of the present subject matter relate to a method. According to various method embodiments, cardiac activity is detected, and neural stimulation is synchronized with a reference event in the detected cardiac activity. Neural stimulation is titrated based on a detected response to the neural stimulation. Other aspects and embodiments are provided herein.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 13, 2013Publication date: August 1, 2013Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Aaron R. McCabe, Imad Libbus, Yi Zhang, Paul A. Haefner, Alok S. Sathaye, Anthony V. Caparso, M. Jason Brooke
-
Publication number: 20130190636Abstract: A system comprises a cardiac signal sensing and a processing circuit. The cardiac signal sensing circuit senses a first cardiac signal segment that includes a QRS complex and a second cardiac signal segment that includes a fiducial indicative of local ventricular activation. The processor circuit includes a site activation timer circuit configured to determine a time duration between a fiducial of the QRS complex of the first cardiac signal segment and the fiducial of the second cardiac signal segment. The processor circuit is configured to generate, using the determined time duration, an indication of optimality of placement of one or more electrodes for delivering therapy and provide the indication to at least one of a user or process.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 19, 2012Publication date: July 25, 2013Inventors: Shibaji Shome, Pramodsingh Hirasingh Thakur, Yinghong Yu, Keith L. Herrmann, Aaron R. McCabe, Jiang Ding
-
Patent number: 8457741Abstract: Methods and devices are described that allow estimation of an electrostimulation capture threshold, such as a dedicated bipolar pacing vector threshold. In an example, an equal-energy assumption between first and second pacing vectors can be used to estimate an electrostimulation capture threshold of a second pacing vector from a measured electrostimulation capture threshold of the first pacing vector and impedances of the first and second pacing vectors. In an example, a relationship between first and second pacing vectors can be determined from measured data, and a parameter of the relationship can be used with a measurement of an electrostimulation capture threshold of the first pacing vector to estimate an electrostimulation capture threshold of the second pacing vector.Type: GrantFiled: October 18, 2010Date of Patent: June 4, 2013Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.Inventors: Amy Jean Brisben, Aaron R. McCabe, Kevin John Stalsberg, Jacob I. Laughner, Clayton S. Foster, David W. Yost