Patents by Inventor Harry Bishop

Harry Bishop 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: 7409240
    Abstract: One aspect of the present invention relates to imaging a patient to determine whether he or she has suffered a myocardial infarction. According to this method, a patient is injected with a bolus having a radioactive tracer. A representative cycle is produced for both the right ventricular passage of the bolus and the left ventricular passage of the bolus based on planar coordinates over time of scintillation events of the tracer. A time activity curve based on activity in each segment of the respective representative cycles is generated. When a segment of heart muscle is damaged its contraction ceases or lags behind the normal surrounding myocardium resulting in a phase shift in the adjacent blood pool.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 9, 2005
    Date of Patent: August 5, 2008
    Inventor: Harry A. Bishop
  • Publication number: 20060226054
    Abstract: An apparatus for a disc screen assembly and a method of making a screen disc is disclosed. The disc screen assembly includes a plurality of classifying discs and a plurality of spacers detachably mounted on the outer perimeter of a tubular shaft. The spacers may be made of a metallic or a polymeric material. The disc screen assembly may span the length or width of a screening bed in one unitary assembly. The spacers are abrasion resistant and communicate sufficient resiliency to the classifying discs.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 31, 2005
    Publication date: October 12, 2006
    Inventor: Harry Bishop
  • Patent number: 6671541
    Abstract: A cardiovascular imaging and functional analysis system and method is disclosed, wherein a dedicated fast, sensitive, compact and economical imaging gamma camera system that is especially suited for heart imaging and functional analysis is employed. The cardiovascular imaging and functional analysis system of the present invention can be used as a dedicated nuclear cardiology small field of view imaging camera. The disclosed cardiovascular imaging system and method has the advantages of being able to image physiology, while offering an inexpensive and portable hardware, unlike MRI, CT, and echocardiography systems. The cardiovascular imaging system of the invention employs a basic modular design suitable for cardiac imaging with one of several radionucleide tracers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 1, 2000
    Date of Patent: December 30, 2003
    Assignee: NeoMed Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Harry Bishop, Stanislaw Majewski, Marc M. Umeno
  • Patent number: 6597940
    Abstract: One aspect of the present invention relates to screening patients for an early stage of coronary artery disease. According to this method, a patient is screened based on the time-activity curve for a radioactive tracer passing through a left ventricle region of the patient's body. According to another aspect of the invention, an array of gamma particle detectors is employed to obtain data for a region of interest that is larger than and encompasses a left ventricle region of the patient's body. An analysis of the data identifies the subset of the region of interest that corresponds to the left ventricle region. According to a further aspect of the present invention, a second technique is employed to locate the left ventricle region. A still further aspect of the present invention relates to obtaining images of a patient's heart using a high temporal resolution gamma camera.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 30, 2001
    Date of Patent: July 22, 2003
    Assignee: NeoMed Technologies
    Inventors: Harry Bishop, Stanislaw Majewski, Marc M. Umeno
  • Publication number: 20020188197
    Abstract: A Cardiovascular imaging and functional analysis system and method employing a dedicated fast, sensitive, compact and economical imaging gamma camera system that is especially suited for heart imaging and functional analysis. The system uses a dedicated nuclear cardiology small field of view imaging camera, allowing image physiology, while offering inexpensive and portable hardware. In some variations, a basic modular design suitable for cardiac imaging with one of several radionucleide tracers is used. The detector is positioned in close proximity to the chest and heart from several different projections, allowing rapid accumulation of data for first-pass analysis, positron imaging, quantitative stress perfusion, and multi-gated equilibrium pooled blood tests. In one variation, a Cardiovascular Non-Invasive Screening Probe system provides rapid, inexpensive preliminary indication of coronary occlusive disease by measuring the activity of emitted particles from an injected bolus of radioactive tracer.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 1, 2000
    Publication date: December 12, 2002
    Inventors: Harry Bishop, Stanislaw Majewski, Marc M. Umeno
  • Publication number: 20020068864
    Abstract: One aspect of the present invention relates to screening patients for an early stage of coronary artery disease. According to this method, a patient is screened based on the time-activity curve for a radioactive tracer passing through a left ventricle region of the patient's body. According to another aspect of the invention, an array of gamma particle detectors is employed to obtain data for a region of interest that is larger than and encompasses a left ventricle region of the patient's body. An analysis of the data identifies the subset of the region of interest that corresponds to the left ventricle region. According to a further aspect of the present invention, a second technique is employed to locate the left ventricle region. A still further aspect of the present invention relates to obtaining images of a patient's heart using a high temporal resolution gamma camera.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 30, 2001
    Publication date: June 6, 2002
    Inventors: Harry Bishop, Stanislaw Majewski, Marc M. Umeno