Patents by Inventor Arnold St. J. Lee

Arnold St. J. Lee 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: 4926866
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsel half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 1988
    Date of Patent: May 22, 1990
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4926874
    Abstract: One aspect of the present invention involves a blood pressure recorder system of the type having an inflatable cuff, a pressurized gas source and an inflation valve. The system includes a cuff pressure trigger unit which senses the gas pressure in the cuff. When the duration of significant gas pressure in the cuff exceeds a predetermined time, the cuff pressure sensor facilitates relieving pressure in the cuff. The system also includes a safety system for insuring that the cuff pressure trigger unit is operative. The safety system is independent of changes in the input power.Also disclosed is an improved doppler ultrasonic blood pressure transducer and a novel method for automatically positioning a blood pressure transducer adjacent a skin surface.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 30, 1989
    Date of Patent: May 22, 1990
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4895155
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., acclerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 1988
    Date of Patent: January 23, 1990
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4893633
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 1988
    Date of Patent: January 16, 1990
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4889130
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 1988
    Date of Patent: December 26, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4889123
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 1988
    Date of Patent: December 26, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4862387
    Abstract: This apparatus and method permit plotting a series of data values at an optimum scale expansion, even when the largest value is not known in advance, for permanent recording or transitory display. In response to each data value several display signals are derived, corresponding to representation of that data value at several different scale expansions. These several signals are used to position respective indicia on a visually readable medium. If desired the several display signals may all be recorded, as for example on magnetic tape, and the acutal plotting (i.e., production of indicia) performed later. The data-value magnitude is represented by respective displacements of the indicia in one direction from a baseline, at the several scale expansions. Thus indicia are produced for all of the scale expansions that correspond to on-scale positions. The medium moves relative to the indicia-producing apparatus, along a second, orthogonal direction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 31, 1988
    Date of Patent: August 29, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4848350
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 1988
    Date of Patent: July 18, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4841980
    Abstract: One aspect of the present invention involves a blood pressure recorder system of the type having an inflatable cuff, a pressurized gas source and an inflation valve. The system includes a cuff pressure trigger unit which senses the gas pressure in the cuff. When the duration of significant gas pressure in the cuff exceeds a predetermined time, the cuff pressure sensor facilitates relieving pressure in the cuff. The system also includes a safety system for insuring that the cuff pressure trigger unit is operative. The safety system is independent of changes in the input power.Also disclosed is an improved doppler ultrasonic blood pressure transducer and a novel method for automatically positioning a blood pressure transducer adjacent a skin surface.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 25, 1985
    Date of Patent: June 27, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4838275
    Abstract: Many subscriber patients are served by this system. In each patient's home is an apparatus that includes special furniture on which the patient lies and sits, and embedded in which are devices that automatically sense multiple parameters related to the patient's health. The patient cooperates only passively. The parameters are so chosen--and are sufficiently numerous and accurate--as to provide in the aggregate a comprehensive profile of the patient's general state of health. The apparatus also generates electronic health-parameter signals related to the sensed parameters, and it transmits these signals from the patient's home to a central surveillance and control office. Equipment there receives the signals, displays corresponding indicia of the parameters, and transmits control signals back to the patient's apparatus. Two-way voice communication between the patient and a highly trained observer at the central office supplements the electronic measurements.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 20, 1987
    Date of Patent: June 13, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4836215
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 11, 1988
    Date of Patent: June 6, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4817610
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 15, 1987
    Date of Patent: April 4, 1989
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4750830
    Abstract: Optical power of a living subject's eye is measured and compared with a calibration value that corresponds to a reference blood-glucose level. The reference level is determined conventionally, as by blood analysis. Optical power of the eye increases with blood-glucose level. The comparison can include interpolation or extrapolation from two or more calibration points. Optical power is measured by projecting an image through an external optical system and through the cornea and lens of the subject's eye onto the subject's retina--while monitoring sharpness of focus at the retina, and systematically modifying the conditions of projection of the image. The relation between sharpness and projection conditions provides the measure of glucose concentration.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 29, 1985
    Date of Patent: June 14, 1988
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4730623
    Abstract: Thermocouple pairs measure the temperatures at a cold-fluid injection point and a downstream point. The reference thermocouple of each pair sees the temperature of a thermally floating heat sink of unknown temperature that has high thermal conductivity and mass, and is well insulated from the environment. Consequently the heat-sink temperature drift is practically constant. To the extent that heat-sink temperature drift is significant, the invention overcomes the effects of drift to a first approximation by providing electronic circuitry that in effect registers the drift in measurement voltage before fluid injection, extrapolates this voltage drift into the measurement time period, and automatically subtracts the extrapolated voltage drift from the measurement voltages.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 14, 1985
    Date of Patent: March 15, 1988
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4681098
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system, apparatus and method for gathering physiological data. Basic to the system of the present invention is a rigid body mold having preferably a negative impression of the dorsal half of the body. By connecting and/or embedding sensors to the body mold at specific locations, e.g., accelerometers, thermistors, and electrocardiogram electrodes, the sensors will be accurately and reproducibly positioned next to a specific body location each time the subject lies in the body mold. The body mold can be used to insulate the body from external motions thereby facilitating the preparation of a ballistocardiogram. The exact re-positioning of the body in the mold allows exact determination of the center of gravity in the horizontal plane of the body.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 11, 1985
    Date of Patent: July 21, 1987
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4672974
    Abstract: Sensitivity or span calibration is adjusted to a desired value by (1) noting the display indication with the reference side of the transducer at atmospheric pressure, (2) substituting a known offset pressure for atmospheric pressure on the reference side, to produce a new display indication, and (3) adjusting the display to produce that amount of displacement (between the display indications in steps 1 and 2) which corresponds to the known offset pressure multiplied by the desired calibration value.With the sensitivity or span calibration adjusted to a desired value, the zero point of the display is adjusted by (1) independently measuring the mean of the actual pressure, (2) noting the mean value of the display indication, and (3) adjusting the zero point to eliminate discrepancy between the mean value of the display and the mean of the actual pressure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 14, 1985
    Date of Patent: June 16, 1987
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee
  • Patent number: 4183256
    Abstract: A variable-ratio angular speed converter of the gear box type is arranged so that each speed reduction setting on the output shaft is a prescribed fraction of the speed reduction of the next-preceding setting. A first tapered gear cluster is fixedly supported on the input shaft, while a plurality of similar second clusters are supported in spaced relation for rotation on an intermediate shaft. Successive speed reductions of the same nominal ratio are imparted (1) between the first cluster on the input shaft and the first second cluster on the intermediate shaft and (2) between successive second clusters on the intermediate shaft. A housing adjustably supported on the output shaft has a selector gear for engaging an arbitrary one of the gears on any of the first and second clusters.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 5, 1978
    Date of Patent: January 15, 1980
    Assignee: Milstein Medical Research Foundation, Inc.
    Inventor: Arnold St. J. Lee