Patents by Inventor Jeffery Wuennemann

Jeffery Wuennemann 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: 20060106345
    Abstract: Disclosed is an interface between a drug delivery cassette and a medical effector system. The cassette may be mounted to the medical effector system in such a way that a fluid tube located on the cassette is positioned adjacent to a pump located on the medical effector system. The medical effector system may purge the fluid line of air by activating the pump and forcing fluid through the fluid line until a sensor positioned to monitor the fluid line indicates that fluid and not air is present in the tube. To prevent air purging of the fluid tube when connected to the patient, the medical effector system prohibits air purging unless the drug delivery end portion of the fluid tube is in a designated storage site located on the cassette. This is accomplished with a position sensor at the storage site that monitors the position of the fluid tube.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 21, 2005
    Publication date: May 18, 2006
    Inventors: Richard Flaker, Mark Burdorff, Gregory Bishop, DeWayne Davis, William Donofrio, Curt Eyster, Hal Katz, David Keilholz, Ross Krogh, Michael Miller, Anil Nalagatla, Paul Niklewski, Jeffery Wuennemann, Jason Derouen
  • Publication number: 20060081259
    Abstract: A medical effector system comprised of a bedside unit and a procedure unit. The bedside unit contains a series of connection points for receiving inputs from a series of patient monitors. The procedure unit contains a patient monitoring and medical effector program, and a drug delivery pump or magnetic flux generator capable of delivering therapeutic energy to a patient. The medical effector system contains the capability to issue and receive a request from a non-sedated patient, issue and receive a request from a sedated patient and then to calculate a time difference. The medical effector program operates the pump or magnetic flux generator based upon at least some of the patient outputs and program inputs including a calculated time difference. A removable umbilical cable connects the two units and allows the output of the patient monitors as well as other information to travel between the two units.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 21, 2005
    Publication date: April 20, 2006
    Inventors: Paul Bruggeman, Mark Burdorff, William Collins, William Donofrio, Curt Eyster, Hal Katz, James Martin, Anil Nalagatla, Paul Niklewski, Salvatore Privitera, Fred Stevens, Jeffery Wuennemann, Randall Hickle
  • Publication number: 20060042633
    Abstract: Disclosed is a drug delivery infusion pump assembly containing a drug delivery pump, a drug delivery cassette, a pump door, and a housing adapted to receive a drug vial. A drug vial centering mechanism ensures varieties of drug vial sizes are compatible with this device. The drug delivery cassette is capable of being positioned on the drug delivery infusion pump assembly so the drug delivery pump will interface with a drug delivery tube located on the drug delivery cassette.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 21, 2005
    Publication date: March 2, 2006
    Inventors: Gregory Bishop, DeWayne Davis, Anil Nalagatla, Jeffery Wuennemann
  • Publication number: 20060042638
    Abstract: Disclosed is an oxygen delivery apparatus constructed from an oxygen delivery manifold, a respiratory cannula, and a host controller. The host controller contains an oxygen delivery program and accepts a respiration input regarding whether the patient is inhaling or exhaling, and whether the patient is breathing orally or nasally. The oxygen delivery program regulates the flow rate of oxygen based in part upon the respiration input provided. A first rates is used when the patient is inhaling and exhaling orally, a second rate is used when the patient is inhaling nasally, and a third rate is used when the patient is exhaling nasally.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 21, 2005
    Publication date: March 2, 2006
    Inventors: Paul Niklewski, William Donofrio, Curt Eyster, James Martin, Anil Nalagatla, Jeffery Wuennemann, Jason Derouen, Jeff Liles