Patents by Inventor Conrad Sowder

Conrad Sowder 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: 20070150010
    Abstract: A pacing monitoring system is described for incorporation in an implantable pacemaker that monitors the pacing rate and/or cumulative pace count in order to protect a patient from excessive pacing. The system includes monitoring circuitry that is configured to operate in multiple monitoring zones, where each zone is adapted to prevent excessively high-rate pacing during a particular mode of device operation.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 22, 2005
    Publication date: June 28, 2007
    Inventors: Scott Stubbs, Conrad Sowder, William Linder, Lynn Elliott, Kenneth Hoyme, Hiten Doshi
  • Publication number: 20060253009
    Abstract: A system and method is disclosed by which an implantable cardiac device may deliver bradycardia therapy in the event of a system fault. A hardware-based safety core provides the logic circuitry for delivering bradycardia therapy in the form of synchronous pacing in the event of a fault which disables operation of the device's primary control circuitry. The safety core pacemaker eliminates common mode failure of the primary control circuits used in the primary pacing system. Failures in the primary controller memory or execution will activate the safety core pacemaker.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 5, 2005
    Publication date: November 9, 2006
    Inventors: Scott Stubbs, Conrad Sowder, William Linder, Lynn Elliott, Kenneth Hoyme, Hiten Doshi
  • Publication number: 20060253163
    Abstract: A system and method is disclosed for system fault recovery by an implantable medical device which employs a global fault response. The system enables the device to consistently recover from transient faults while maintaining a history of the reason for the device fault. Upon detection of a fault, the primary controller of the device signals a reset controller which then issues a reset command. All sub-systems of the primary device controller are then reset together rather than resetting individual sub-systems independently to ensure deterministic behavior.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 5, 2005
    Publication date: November 9, 2006
    Inventors: Scott Stubbs, Conrad Sowder, William Linder, Lynn Elliott, Kenneth Hoyme, Hiten Doshi
  • Publication number: 20060253158
    Abstract: A system and method is disclosed by which an implantable cardiac device may deliver tachyarrhythmia therapy in the event of a system fault. A hardware-based safety core provides the logic circuitry for detecting tachyarrhythmias and delivering shock therapy in the event of a fault which disables operation of the device's primary control circuitry. The safety core defibrillator eliminates common mode failure of the primary control circuits used in the primary defibrillator system. Failures in the primary controller memory or execution will activate the safety core defibrillator.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 5, 2005
    Publication date: November 9, 2006
    Inventors: Scott Stubbs, Conrad Sowder, William Linder, Lynn Elliott, Kenneth Hoyme, Hiten Doshi
  • Publication number: 20060111759
    Abstract: A system and method for temporary programming of an implantable medical device. The system and method include a repeater uploading temporary programming and instructions to a temporary memory of the device and then instructing the device to operate according to the temporary instructions. If during a first time period, the device is not in continuous periodic communication with the repeater, the device automatically reverts to operation under the normal operating instructions. At the end of the first time period, the caregiver or the patient may decide to revert to the normal programming. During a second time period, the device operates according to the temporary programming unless the caregiver or the patient instructs the device to revert to the normal programming, or the device fails to receive a periodic continuation signal from the repeater. Adverse health affects to the patient may also trigger the device to revert to the normal programming during either the first or second time period.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 19, 2004
    Publication date: May 25, 2006
    Inventors: Kenneth Hoyme, Alan Smythe, Howard Simms, Conrad Sowder, David Ternes, Sylvia Quiles