Patents by Inventor David Nuñez

David Nuñez 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: 20040181131
    Abstract: Methods and apparatuses of determining the pH of a sample. A method can comprise determining an infrared spectrum of the sample, and determining the hemoglobin concentration of the sample. The hemoglobin concentration and the infrared spectrum can then be used to determine the pH of the sample. In some embodiments, the hemoglobin concentration can be used to select an model relating infrared spectra to pH that is applicable at the determined hemoglobin concentration. In other embodiments, a model relating hemoglobin concentration and infrared spectra to pH can be used. An apparatus according to the present invention can comprise an illumination system, adapted to supply radiation to a sample; a collection system, adapted to collect radiation expressed from the sample responsive to the incident radiation; and an analysis system, adapted to relate information about the incident radiation, the expressed radiation, and the hemoglobin concentration of the sample to pH.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 25, 2004
    Publication date: September 16, 2004
    Inventors: John D. Maynard, Shonn P. Hendee, Mark R. Rohrscheib, David Nunez, M. Kathleen Alam, James E. Franke, Gabor J. Kemeny
  • Publication number: 20030023170
    Abstract: Systems and methods for establishing and/or maintaining the prediction capability over time of a multivariate calibration model designed for quantitative optical spectroscopic measurement of attributes or analytes in bodily tissues, bodily fluids or other biological samples, which are particularly useful when the spectral absorbance of the attribute or analyte is small relative to the background. The present invention provides an optically similar reference sample to capture the characteristics of instrument and environmental variation and to reduce the effect of such variation on the measurement capability of the model. The optically similar reference is preferably stable over time and is designed such that its optical properties are sufficiently matched to the sample of interest that instrument and environmental variations are captured in the same manner in both the test sample of interest and the optically similar reference sample.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 11, 2001
    Publication date: January 30, 2003
    Inventors: Craig Gardner, Michael J. Haass, Robert K. Rowe, Howland Jones, Steven T. Strohl, Matthew J. Novak, Russell E. Abbink, David Nunez, William Gruner, Robert D. Johnson