Patents by Inventor Charles D. Lennox
Charles D. Lennox 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: 7094234Abstract: Disclosed is an apparatus and method for preventing secondary ischemic injury in the brain. The apparatus includes an interstitial brain probe and an introducer sheath, which are placed into an ischemic region of the brain by stereotaxic surgical technique. The interstitial brain probe and introducer sheath provide for thermal coagulation to provide hemostasis, aspiration of blood clots, infusion of therapeutic agents, and localized hypothermia within an ischemic region of the brain. The interstitial brain probe cools an ischemic region of the brain from within the ischemic region, and cooling is substantially limited to the ischemic region. Cooling is provided for a period of time greater than one hour.Type: GrantFiled: August 27, 2002Date of Patent: August 22, 2006Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 7056334Abstract: A thermal delivery system includes a base unit having a thermal regulation source and a console configured to deliver cooling fluid to a body-cooling device to induce hypothermia and aid in resuscitation of a patient. When a user docks the console with the base station, the console thermally contacts the thermal regulation source. The thermal regulation source alters the temperature of fluid held by the console for an indefinite period of time. In the case where a patient, at a location remote from the thermal delivery system, requires induction of hypothermia, a user detaches the console from the base station and transports the console to the patient's location. The configuration of the thermal delivery system allows the base station to thermally adjust the temperature of the fluid held by the console for an extended period of time, thereby minimizing a delay in transporting a console having the thermally adjusted fluid to the patient.Type: GrantFiled: May 28, 2004Date of Patent: June 6, 2006Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 7052509Abstract: A cooling system includes a console and a tissue cooling device such as a head-cooling device. An operator applies the head-cooling device to the head of a patient at risk for ischemic injury. The console provides a cooling fluid to a fluid circulation space located between the cooling device and the patient's head under a positive gage pressure. Direct contact between the cooling fluid and the patient's head provides a relatively rapid induction of systemic hypothermia in the patient, thereby minimizing or preventing ischemic injury in the patient. The console also removes air from a channel disposed about an inner rim of the cooling device, using a negative gage pressure. Such removal of the air from the channel seals the rim of the cooling device to the head of the patient, including portions of the channel in contact with hair of the patient's head, and minimizes leaking of the cooling fluid beyond the rim of the cooling device.Type: GrantFiled: November 12, 2003Date of Patent: May 30, 2006Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventors: Charles D. Lennox, Steven M. Johnson, Susan Beinor, Maria Benson, Don Paul Nogueira, John W. Carroll, Helen Maslocka
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Patent number: 7008445Abstract: Disclosed is a system and method for inducing therapeutic levels of hypothermia in a patient in the emergent care setting. The system consists of a small battery operated console and one or more garments. The garments are connected to the console by one or more umbilicals. The console provides cold fluid to the garments under pressure and the garment cools the surface of the body. Fluid returns from the garment back to the console in a closed loop fashion. The console contains an electrical battery and a thermal battery that provides operation of the system for more than one hour. The cooling capacity of the system is sufficient to induce therapeutic levels of hypothermia in approximately 30 to 90 minutes in most patients. Use of the system does not preclude any therapeutic or diagnostic interventions that are commonly performed in the emergent care setting.Type: GrantFiled: April 25, 2003Date of Patent: March 7, 2006Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 6962600Abstract: A cooling system includes a pressurized liquid refrigerant source having a liquid refrigerant and a cooling garment coupled to the liquid refrigerant source. The cooling garment defines chambers containing a heat transfer fluid. During operation, a user places the cooling garment in thermal communication with a body portion of a subject. As the cooling garment receives the liquid refrigerant from the pressurized source, the liquid refrigerant thermally contacts the heat transfer fluid and evaporates, thereby reducing the temperature of the heat transfer fluid. The heat transfer fluid, in turn, reduces the temperature of the body portion in thermal communication with the cooling garment. The heat transfer fluid acts to substantially evenly distribute cooling, as provided by the evaporation of the liquid refrigerant, to the body portion contacting the cooling garment to minimize localized “cold spots” within the chamber.Type: GrantFiled: July 30, 2004Date of Patent: November 8, 2005Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventors: Charles D. Lennox, Helen Maslocka
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Patent number: 6939320Abstract: Medical devices including a substrate that are expandable from a compressed state to an expanded state; a coating on the substrate, the coating having a drug agent incorporated therein; and a sheath over the coating. The sheath is expandable from a compressed state to an expanded state and has at least one perforation therein. The medical devices are configured such that when the substrate is in a compressed state, the sheath is also in a compressed state and the perforation is substantially closed. When the substrate is in an expanded state, the sheath is also in an expanded state and the perforation is substantially open. The invention also includes a method of using the medical devices for the controlled, localized delivery of a drug agent to a target location within a mammalian body.Type: GrantFiled: June 27, 2001Date of Patent: September 6, 2005Assignee: Boston Scientific SciMed., Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 6929656Abstract: Disclosed is an apparatus and method for reducing secondary brain injury. The apparatus includes a brain-cooling probe and a control console. The brain-cooling probe cools the brain to prevent secondary injury by cooling the cerebrospinal fluid within one or more brain ventricles. The brain-cooling probe withdraws a small amount of cerebrospinal fluid from a ventricle into a cooling chamber located ex-vivo in close proximity to the head. After the cerebrospinal fluid is cooled it is then reintroduced back into the ventricle. This process is repeated in a cyclical or continuous manner in order to achieve and maintain a predetermined brain ventricle temperature lower than normal body temperature. The apparatus and method disclosed provides effective brain ventricle cooling without the need to introduce extra-corporeal fluids into the brain.Type: GrantFiled: September 13, 2002Date of Patent: August 16, 2005Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 6835183Abstract: A urethral prosthesis provides relief of urinary retention and has first and second tubular elements with an interposed bridge segment. A valve can be disposed in the second tubular element to control the flow of urine therethrough.Type: GrantFiled: September 30, 2002Date of Patent: December 28, 2004Assignee: SciMed Life Systems Inc.Inventors: Charles D. Lennox, Ronald B. Lamport, Andrew H. Levine, Douglas E. Godshall, Aaron Perlmutter, Steven Nordstrom
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Publication number: 20040243202Abstract: A thermal delivery system includes a base unit having a thermal regulation source and a console configured to deliver cooling fluid to a body-cooling device to induce hypothermia and aid in resuscitation of a patient. When a user docks the console with the base station, the console thermally contacts the thermal regulation source. The thermal regulation source alters the temperature of fluid held by the console for an indefinite period of time. In the case where a patient, at a location remote from the thermal delivery system, requires induction of hypothermia, a user detaches the console from the base station and transports the console to the patient's location. The configuration of the thermal delivery system allows the base station to thermally adjust the temperature of the fluid held by the console for an extended period of time, thereby minimizing a delay in transporting a console having the thermally adjusted fluid to the patient.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 28, 2004Publication date: December 2, 2004Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Publication number: 20040158303Abstract: A cooling system includes a console and a tissue cooling device such as a head-cooling device. An operator applies the head-cooling device to the head of a patient at risk for ischemic injury. The console provides a cooling fluid to a fluid circulation space located between the cooling device and the patient's head under a positive gage pressure. Direct contact between the cooling fluid and the patient's head provides a relatively rapid induction of systemic hypothermia in the patient, thereby minimizing or preventing ischemic injury in the patient. The console also removes air from a channel disposed about an inner rim of the cooling device, using a negative gage pressure. Such removal of the air from the channel seals the rim of the cooling device to the head of the patient, including portions of the channel in contact with hair of the patient's head, and minimizes leaking of the cooling fluid beyond the rim of the cooling device.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 12, 2003Publication date: August 12, 2004Applicant: MedCool, Inc.Inventors: Charles D. Lennox, Steven M. Johnson, Susan Beinor, Maria Benson, Don Paul Nogueira, John W. Carroll, Helen Maslocka
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Patent number: 6726709Abstract: Disclosed is an apparatus and method for preventing secondary ischemic injury in the brain. The apparatus includes an interstitial brain-cooling probe that is placed into an ischemic region of the brain by stereotaxic surgical technique, and a control console. The control console provides a source of cooling fluid to the interstitial brain-cooling probe, and controls the flow of cooling fluid according to signals received from a temperature sensor mounted on the interstitial brain-cooling probe. The interstitial brain-cooling probe cools an ischemic region of the brain from within the ischemic region, and cooling is substantially limited to the ischemic region. Cooling is provided for a period of time greater than one hour.Type: GrantFiled: April 24, 2002Date of Patent: April 27, 2004Assignee: MedCool, Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Publication number: 20030236561Abstract: Disclosed is a system and method for inducing therapeutic levels of hypothermia in a patient in the emergent care setting. The system consists of a small battery operated console and one or more garments. The garments are connected to the console by one or more umbilicals. The console provides cold fluid to the garments under pressure and the garment cools the surface of the body. Fluid returns from the garment back to the console in a closed loop fashion. The console contains an electrical battery and a thermal battery that provides operation of the system for more than one hour. The cooling capacity of the system is sufficient to induce therapeutic levels of hypothermia in approximately 30 to 90 minutes in most patients. Use of the system does not preclude any therapeutic or diagnostic interventions that are commonly performed in the emergent care setting.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 25, 2003Publication date: December 25, 2003Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Publication number: 20030130651Abstract: Disclosed is an apparatus and method for uniform selective cerebral hypothermia. The apparatus includes a brain-cooling probe, a head-cooling cap, a body-heating device and a control console. The brain-cooling probe cools the cerebrospinal fluid within one or more brain ventricles. The brain-cooling probe withdraws a small amount of cerebrospinal fluid from a ventricle into a cooling chamber located ex-vivo in close proximity to the head. After the cerebrospinal fluid is cooled it is then reintroduced back into the ventricle. This process is repeated in a cyclical or continuous manner. The head-cooling cap cools the cranium and therefore cools surface of the brain. The combination of ventricle cooling and cranium cooling provides for whole brain cooling while minimizing temperature gradients within the brain.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 27, 2002Publication date: July 10, 2003Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Publication number: 20030130653Abstract: An electrosurgical device includes an elongated body including a proximal end and a distal end and defining a longitudinal axis, at least one arm coupled to the distal end of the elongated body and an electrode coupled to at least one arm. The electrode includes an upper surface and a lower surface. The lower surface is substantially convex and defines a radius of curvature relative to an axis substantially perpendicular to the longitudinal axis.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 12, 2002Publication date: July 10, 2003Applicant: Scimed Life Systems, Inc.Inventors: Robert Sixto, Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 6537193Abstract: An implantable cancer therapy device includes adjacent segments of a radioactive therapeutic and an adjunctive therapeutic. The segments of radioactive therapeutic and adjunctive therapeutic can be alternatively disposed in a predetermined spatial array. The implantation can be permanent or temporary. The device can be a substantially cylindrical filament or plurality of spaced radioactive seed overlaid with an adjunctive therapeutic. The device can also be a monofilament comprising an adjunctive therapeutic, the monofilament having spaced depressions for indicating length and facilitating cutting.Type: GrantFiled: October 30, 2000Date of Patent: March 25, 2003Assignee: SciMed Life Systems, Inc.Inventor: Charles D. Lennox
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Publication number: 20030036802Abstract: A urethral prosthesis provides relief of urinary retention and has first and second tubular elements with an interposed bridge segment. A valve can be disposed in the second tubular element to control the flow of urine therethrough.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 30, 2002Publication date: February 20, 2003Applicant: Scimed Life Systems, Inc.Inventors: Charles D. Lennox, Ronald B. Lamport, Andrew H. Levine, Douglas E. Godshall, Aaron Perlmutter, Steven Nordstrom
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Publication number: 20030028188Abstract: A deflectable interstitial ablation device includes an elongated housing, an electrode mounted within the elongated housing, a driver coupled to the electrode, an imaging device integrally mounted within the elongated housing and a deflection system disposed within the elongated housing. The elongated housing has a proximal end, a distal end, and a deflectable segment. The electrode is deployable from a first position within the elongated housing to a second position a predetermined distance beyond the distal end of the elongated housing. The electrode further has a flexible portion capable of deflecting with the deflectable segment of the elongated housing, and can be deployed by the driver with a sufficient force such that penetration of the urethral wall occurs in a single motion. The imaging device further has a flexible portion capable of deflecting with the deflectable segment of the elongated housing.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 30, 2002Publication date: February 6, 2003Applicant: Scimed Life Systems, Inc.Inventors: Kimberly A. Paddock, James E. Mayberry, Charles D. Lennox
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Patent number: 6494879Abstract: A urethral prosthesis provides relief of urinary retention and has first and second tubular elements with an interposed bridge segment. A valve can be disposed in the second tubular element to control the flow of urine therethrough.Type: GrantFiled: May 14, 1999Date of Patent: December 17, 2002Assignee: SCIMED Life Systems, Inc.Inventors: Charles D. Lennox, Ronald B. Lamport, Andrew H. Levine, Douglas E. Godshall, Aaron Perlmutter, Steven Nordstrom
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Patent number: 6482203Abstract: A deflectable interstitial ablation device includes an elongated housing, an electrode mounted within the elongated housing, a driver coupled to the electrode, an imaging device integrally mounted within the elongated housing and a deflection system disposed within the elongated housing. The elongated housing has a proximal end, a distal end, and a deflectable segment. The electrode is deployable from a first position within the elongated housing to a second position a predetermined distance beyond the distal end of the elongated housing. The electrode further has a flexible portion capable of deflecting with the deflectable segment of the elongated housing, and can be deployed by the driver with a sufficient force such that penetration of the urethral wall occurs in a single motion. The imaging device further has a flexible portion capable of deflecting with the deflectable segment of the elongated housing.Type: GrantFiled: December 4, 2001Date of Patent: November 19, 2002Assignee: SciMed Life Systems, Inc.Inventors: Kimberly A. Paddock, James E. Mayberry, Charles D. Lennox
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Publication number: 20020055787Abstract: A urethral prosthesis provides relief of urinary retention and has first and second tubular elements with an interposed bridge segment. A valve can be disposed in the second tubular element to control the flow of urine therethrough.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 14, 1999Publication date: May 9, 2002Inventors: CHARLES D. LENNOX, RONALD B. LAMPORT, ANDREW H. LEVINE, DOUGLAS E. GODSHALL, AARON PERLMUTTER, STEVEN NORDSTROM