Patents by Inventor Binh C. Tran

Binh C. Tran 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).

  • Publication number: 20100016840
    Abstract: Devices, systems and methods for delivering and positioning an implantable medical device and for evaluating an acoustic communication link are disclosed. An illustrative system includes a catheter adapted to contain an implantable device with a biosensor and an acoustic transducer configured to transmit an acoustic signal, and an implant assist device in acoustic communication with the implantable device via an acoustic communication link. The implant assist device includes an acoustic transducer adapted to receive the acoustic signal transmitted by the implantable medical device, and control/processing circuitry configured to evaluate a performance of the acoustic link.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 1, 2009
    Publication date: January 21, 2010
    Inventors: Jeffrey E. Stahmann, Paul J. Huelskamp, Binh C. Tran, Krishna Sridharan, Jamie S. Collier, Marshall S. Comisar, Keith R. Maile
  • Patent number: 7634318
    Abstract: An acoustic energy delivery system for delivering acoustic energy to an implantable medical device (“IMD”). The system includes an IMD having a power source and an energy delivery device. The energy delivery device includes a controller and an array of ultrasonic elements electrically coupled to the controller and configured to deliver acoustic energy to the IMD. Methods of delivering acoustic energy to an IMD are also disclosed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 28, 2008
    Date of Patent: December 15, 2009
    Assignee: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.
    Inventors: Binh C. Tran, Robert S. Harguth, Bin Mi, Keith R. Maile
  • Publication number: 20090201148
    Abstract: Systems and methods for wireless signal transfers between ultrasound-enabled medical devices are disclosed. An illustrative system includes a source device equipped with multiple transducer elements configured to transmit an acoustic wave, a target device including an acoustic transducer for receiving the acoustic wave from the source device, and a controller configured to determine adjustments to one or more transmission parameters of the source device for increasing the signal coherence of the acoustic wave at the target device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 6, 2009
    Publication date: August 13, 2009
    Inventors: Binh C. Tran, Bin Mi, Robert S. Harguth
  • Publication number: 20090177251
    Abstract: A system and method for in situ trimming of oscillators in a pair of implantable medical devices is provided. Each frequency over a range of oscillator trim frequencies for an initiating implantable medical device is selected and a plurality of commands are sent via an acoustic transducer in situ over the frequency selected. Each frequency over a range of oscillator trim frequencies for a responding implantable medical device is selected and a response to each of the commands received is sent via an acoustic transducer in situ over the frequency selected. The responses received by the initiating implantable medical device are evaluated and a combination of the oscillator trim frequencies for both implantable medical devices that together exhibit a strongest acoustic wave is identified. Oscillators in both implantable medical devices are trimmed to the oscillator trim frequencies in the combination identified.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 7, 2009
    Publication date: July 9, 2009
    Inventors: Paul Huelskamp, Thomas J. Harris, Binh C. Tran, Ramprasad Vijayagopal
  • Publication number: 20090082781
    Abstract: An apparatus comprising an implantable acoustic transducer, an acoustic transducer interface circuit communicatively coupled to the acoustic transducer, and a controller circuit communicatively coupled to the acoustic transducer interface circuit. The controller is configured to, in response to receiving an indication of a patient condition associated with a development of a blood vessel obstruction, initiate delivery of acoustic energy that mitigates the blood vessel obstruction. Other systems and methods are described.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 24, 2007
    Publication date: March 26, 2009
    Applicant: Cardiac Pacemakers, Inc.
    Inventors: Binh C. Tran, Abhi Chavan, Rodney W. Salo, Jonathan Kwok
  • Publication number: 20080312720
    Abstract: An acoustic energy delivery system for delivering acoustic energy to an implantable medical device (“IMD”). The system includes an IMD having a power source and an energy delivery device. The energy delivery device includes a controller and an array of ultrasonic elements electrically coupled to the controller and configured to deliver acoustic energy to the IMD. Methods of delivering acoustic energy to an IMD are also disclosed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 28, 2008
    Publication date: December 18, 2008
    Inventors: Binh C. Tran, Robert S. Harguth, Bin Mi, Keith R. Maile
  • Publication number: 20080171941
    Abstract: Systems and methods for reducing power consumption in implantable medical devices (IMDs) in which an IMD implantable in an artery monitors blood pressure. A master device monitors a physiological signal, such as respiratory cycle, and instructs the IMD to take blood pressure measurements over a sampling interval, the duration of which is determined by the master device based on the monitored physiological signal. The master device may determine an end-expiration point of the respiratory cycle and send synchronization information to the IMD to further shorten the sampling interval by coinciding the sampling interval with the end expiration point of the respiratory cycle. The IMD may further conserve power by including processing abilities to collect and/or transmit only a subset of data representing the blood pressure signal, for example, systolic, diastolic, and/or mean blood pressure signal values. The blood pressure readings, once taken, may be transferred to the master device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 11, 2008
    Publication date: July 17, 2008
    Inventors: Paul J. Huelskamp, Wangcai Liao, Keith R. Maile, Binh C. Tran