Patents by Inventor Alois A. Langer
Alois A. Langer 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).
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Patent number: 4650465Abstract: An angiographic injector having a separable console selecting and displaying injector functions and parameters. Microprocessors provide serial data transmission between console and injector base, and between injector head and injector base. A microprocessor in the base controls the injector.Type: GrantFiled: November 13, 1984Date of Patent: March 17, 1987Assignee: Liebel-Flarsheim CompanyInventors: Alois A. Langer, Albert W. Rinne
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Patent number: 4572191Abstract: An externally controlled implantable electronic device for delivering a cardioverting pulse of energy to an ailing heart. A defibrillator produces a first signal when its storage device is fully charged and ready to be discharged, and a second signal when a predetermined characteristic of an ECG signal is detected. An actuator is provided for determining the presence of both of these signals. If during a predetermined time period, there is a simultaneous occurrence of the first and second signals, then the defibrillator will be activated to deliver the cardioverting shock to the heart. In the absence of either of the two signals, the defibrillator will not deliver a shock.Type: GrantFiled: February 23, 1984Date of Patent: February 25, 1986Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Mieczyslaw Mirowski, Morton M. Mower, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4567883Abstract: A data recording arrangement for recording ECG data within the body of a patient, for transmitting the ECG data to a point external to the body of a patient, and for recovering the transmitted ECG data is disclosed. The recording arrangement employs delta modulation circuitry for delta modulating the ECG data to obtain a delta modulated digital pulse train. The digital pulse train may be stored within the body of a patient for subsequent transmission external to the body of a patient. Transmission of the data external to the body of a patient may be by a piezoelectric transducer which transmits the digital data audibly for external detection and delta demodulation. Alternatively, delta demodulation may occur within the patient's body, and the demodulated analog signal may then be transmitted by FM, using the piezoelectric transducer to provide the FM audible signal detectable by an FM demodulator external to the body.Type: GrantFiled: June 9, 1983Date of Patent: February 4, 1986Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Mir Imran
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Patent number: 4475551Abstract: The invention relates to an arrhythmia detection system and method for defibrillating the heart of a patient experiencing abnormal cardiac rhythm, wherein the abnormal cardiac rhythm (comprising one of fibrillation, high rate tachycardia, and low rate tachycardia) is first detected, the heart rate is sensed so as to distinguish between fibrillation and high rate tachycardia, on the one hand, and low rate tachycardia, on the other hand, and automatic defibrillation of the heart of the patient is implemented when one of fibrillation and high rate tachycardia is determined. In one embodiment, base and apical electrodes are connected to a probability density function (PDF) circuit and a rate circuit. When both abnormal cardiac rhythm and excessively high heart rate are detected, defibrillation of the heart of the patient is implemented.Type: GrantFiled: September 2, 1982Date of Patent: October 9, 1984Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Marlin S. Heilman
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Patent number: 4440172Abstract: The invention relates to an apparatus for combining pacing and cardioverting functions in a single implanted device, circuitry being provided not only to interface the defibrillator to the ECG amplifier and other elements of the device, but also to provide protection of the ECG amplifier from the defibrillator output pulses, from loading by the defibrillator itself, and from overloading by externally generated defibrillator pulses. A specific embodiment of the invention combines a defibrillator, a pacer and an ECG amplifier in a single implanted device utilizing two terminal-electrode lead combinations for connection to the patient, while further embodiments employ three and four terminal-electrode lead combinations. The invention employs a high-frequency transformer coupling technique for pacing, or, alternatively, high-frequency transformer coupling with modulation-demodulation.Type: GrantFiled: December 11, 1980Date of Patent: April 3, 1984Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventor: Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4407288Abstract: An implantable heart stimulator and related method calls for the determination of a given heart condition from among a plurality of conditions, the selection of at least one mode of operation for treating the determined condition, and the execution of the mode of operation selected, so as to treat the determined condition. In one embodiment of the invention, wherein a plurality of modes of operation for treating the various conditions are provided, the implantable heart stimulator includes processors, each processor being designed to efficiently execute a respective group of modes of operation. A further embodiment of the present invention calls for the implantable heart stimulator to be implemented by at least one programmable microprocessor. A still further embodiment calls for the provision of a data input/output channel, by means of which data can be provided to and retrieved from the implantable heart stimulator.Type: GrantFiled: March 16, 1981Date of Patent: October 4, 1983Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Steve A. Kolenik, Marlin S. Heilman, Mieczyslaw Mirowski, Morton M. Mower
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Patent number: 4323075Abstract: A fully implantable power supply for use with or in a fully implantable defibrillator, which has a fibrillation detector in circuit with the power supply and a power inverter switchably in circuit with the power supply. The power supply comprises an energy source which includes a plurality of batteries arranged in series, each of the batteries having a pair of output terminals, each of the batteries producing a multilevel voltage across its pair of output terminals, the voltage being at a first level when the battery is fully charged and dropping to a second level at some point during the discharge of the battery. Circuitry in the form of a plurality of unidirectional conducting devices is provided for creating a first conductive path between the serially-connected batteries and the fibrillation detector, and a second conductive path between the inverter and the batteries that are producing the first level of voltage.Type: GrantFiled: July 2, 1979Date of Patent: April 6, 1982Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventor: Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4316472Abstract: An externally controlled implantable electronic device for delivering a cardioverting pulse of energy to the atrium of an ailing heart. In one embodiment, the device is particularly suited for use when the patient visits the office of his physician, and contemplates the transmission of both information and powering energy through the skin of the patient. In another embodiment, the device can be readily operated at home, by the patient, and without the intervention of the physician. Here, the source of energy is permanently implanted.Type: GrantFiled: August 9, 1979Date of Patent: February 23, 1982Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Mieczyslaw Mirowski, Morton M. Mower, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4303075Abstract: A method and apparatus for maximizing stroke volume through atrioventricular pacing using an implanted cardioverter/pacer accomplishes AV pacing with an AV delay tailored to the particular patient, thereby maximizing accuracy and efficiency. The invention involves the measurement of successive impedance changes, or swings, from one heart cycle to the next, across a pair of electrodes connected in proximity to the heart, the processing of the successive impedance changes to detect variations and directions of variations thereof, the issuance of atrial and ventricular pacing pulses, separated by a time interval therebetween, to the atria and to the ventricles, respectively, and the selective increasing or decreasing of the time interval between the atrial and ventricular pacing pulses in dependence on the directions of variation of the successive impedance changes to maximize impedance swings.Type: GrantFiled: February 11, 1980Date of Patent: December 1, 1981Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Marlin S. Heilman, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4300567Abstract: A method and apparatus for effecting automatic ventricular defibrillation and/or demand cardioversion comprises an implanted automatic defibrillator having a normal (ventricular defibrillation) mode of operation and a cardioverting (demand cardioversion) mode of operation. One embodiment of the invention includes a simulated fibrillation source, externally located, for applying a simulated fibrillation signal to the patient via corresponding electrodes, the internal automatic defibrillator detecting the simulated fibrillation signal and responding thereto so as to apply a defibrillating voltage (in the normal mode) or a cardioverting voltage (in the cardioverting mode) to the heart of the patient. Another embodiment of the invention also includes an external command system, by means of which the implanted automatic defibrillator is actuated from the normal mode to the cardioverting mode, to reduce the discharge energy level, to cardiovert in synchronization with the QRS complex, or both.Type: GrantFiled: February 11, 1980Date of Patent: November 17, 1981Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Steve Kolenik, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4291707Abstract: Disclosed is an implantable cardiac electrode for use in defibrillation. The electrode has a metallic mesh electrode surface surrounded by an insulating material which is formed so as to increase the metallic surface area while providing a substantially uniform current density across the electrode surface. An additional electrode tip is included for use in the event that pacing is required; the pacer tip may have a detachable lead for removal after surgery. The electrode may be implanted without major surgery by means of a specialized insertion tool which cooperates with a pocket formed in the electrode. After implantation, the electrode may also be used as a pick-up in an electrocardiogram system.Type: GrantFiled: April 30, 1979Date of Patent: September 29, 1981Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Marlin S. Heilman, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4254775Abstract: A fully implantable defibrillator in which the components of the defibrillator are housed within an implantable casing. Defined within the implantable casing are two chambers. Each of the chambers is hermetically sealed from the other and from the exterior environment surrounding the implantable casing. Disposed within the first chamber is a battery and an energy storage device. A charging circuit is disposed within the second chamber and is operatively associated with the battery and the energy storage device for charging the energy storage device to a level capable of defibrillating a malfunctioning heart. A discharging circuit is disposed within the second chamber and is operatively associated with the energy storage device, for initiating the discharge of the energy storage device into the heart of the wearer. The geometry of the implantable casing is chosen to optimize the packaging of the defibrillator components therein.Type: GrantFiled: July 2, 1979Date of Patent: March 10, 1981Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventor: Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4223678Abstract: A device for recording and subsequently reproducing information, such as desired portions of an ECG signal produced by a heart prior to and during the occurrence of a disturbance in cardiac electrical activity. Two basic embodiments of the inventive recorder are contemplated. One embodiment is fully implantable and is encased with sensing and defibrillating electronics. With this embodiment, a low-power, low-capacity, continually updated recorder is continually operative, and a high-capacity stand-by recorder is actuated upon the sensing of fibrillation. An external device is used to retrieve by telemetry, the information stored in the implanted recorder. The second embodiment of the inventive recorder is an external device which has external electrodes for associating with the patient; ECG information is transmitted to the recorder unit by telemetry. Here, because power consumption is not so critical as with the implantable embodiment, a delay-type continually updated memory is continuously operative.Type: GrantFiled: May 3, 1978Date of Patent: September 23, 1980Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Morton M. Mower
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Patent number: 4210149Abstract: Disclosed in an implantable cardioverter having the capability of communicating with its wearer. In one specific embodiment, the cardioverter is an automatic, fully implantable ventricular defibrillator including an electrical stimulator to deliver a mild shock to the wearer to inform the wearer, for example, that fibrillation has been sensed. In another embodiment, communication from the implanted defibrillator to the wearer is by means of an implanted audio transducer. And in a third embodiment the implanted defibrillator communicates with the wearer by issuing a mechanical vibration. Also disclosed is a mechanism whereby the wearer is able to disenable the defibrillator, and prevent the delivery of a defibrillating pulse.Type: GrantFiled: April 17, 1978Date of Patent: July 1, 1980Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Marlin S. Heilman, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: 4202340Abstract: Disclosed is a method and an apparatus for monitoring heart activity, for indicating or detecting abnormalities in such activity, and for taking corrective measures to return an arrhythmic heart to normal sinus rhythm. In one embodiment, monitoring and detecting are accomplished by developing a probability density function from ECG signals, or by sampling at least two portions of a probability density function. In another embodiment, a phase lock loop circuit is utilized to indicate fibrillation by the loop's inability to lock onto R--R interval signals. And in still another embodiment, cardiac electrodes are used to sense pulsatile impedance changes, absent in the presence of fibrillation. Also disclosed is a two-stage detector whose second stage is brought out of a stand-by state only after an arrhythmic condition is indicated by the first stage.Type: GrantFiled: February 15, 1978Date of Patent: May 13, 1980Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Marlin S. Heilman, Morton M. Mower, Mieczyslaw Mirowski
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Patent number: 4184493Abstract: Disclosed are two embodiments of a circuit for analyzing the ECG signals of a heart and for delivering a cardioverting pulse of energy to the heart if the heart is in an arrhythmic state in need of cardioversion. In the first embodiment, the ECG is filtered by a high pass filter to provide the derivative of the ECG, is reviewed by a window detector to determine the average time that the input ECG spends at high slope, and then the average occurrence of high slope segments is compared with a predetermined reference to determine whether the ECG is normal. Cardioversion is effected if the ECG is abnormal. In the second embodiment, an absolute value circuit and a level comparator is used in place of the window detector. The input ECG is normalized by an automatic gain control where the AGC voltage is derived from the ECG signals after high pass filtration.Type: GrantFiled: February 15, 1978Date of Patent: January 22, 1980Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Marlin S. Heilman, Morton M. Mower, Mieczyslaw Mirowski
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Patent number: 4164946Abstract: Disclosed is a permanently implantable cardioverter, or defibrillator including built-in interrogation and testing circuitry. Implanted fault detection circuits react to malfunctions in the implanted fibrillation detection circuitry, and ensure that inappropriate defibrillation pulses are not delivered to the wearer. Also disclosed is an implantable externally actuatable interrogation and test circuit which interrogates the sensing circuitry for faults, and which delivers a realistic defibrillation pulse to an implanted test load. An external device for monitoring the operation of the implanted defibrillator is also disclosed.Type: GrantFiled: May 27, 1977Date of Patent: August 21, 1979Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventor: Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: D269205Type: GrantFiled: August 5, 1980Date of Patent: May 31, 1983Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Alois A. Langer, Marlin S. Heilman
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Patent number: D273514Type: GrantFiled: August 5, 1980Date of Patent: April 17, 1984Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Marlin S. Heilman, Alois A. Langer
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Patent number: D274262Type: GrantFiled: January 12, 1983Date of Patent: June 12, 1984Assignee: Mieczyslaw MirowskiInventors: Marlin S. Heilman, Alois A. Langer