Patents by Inventor Mark T. Jones

Mark T. Jones 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: 9433766
    Abstract: Disclosed is an expandable transluminal sheath, for introduction into the body while in a first, small cross-sectional area configuration, and subsequent expansion of at least a part of the distal end of the sheath to a second, enlarged cross-sectional configuration. The sheath is configured for use in the vascular system and has utility in the introduction and removal of implant delivery catheters. The access route is through the femoral arteries and the iliac arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is maintained in the first, low cross-sectional configuration during advancement to the arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is subsequently expanded using a radial dilatation device, which is removed prior to the introduction of implant delivery catheters.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 20, 2013
    Date of Patent: September 6, 2016
    Assignee: Onset Medical Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Bishop, Jay Lenker, Edward J. Nance, Huan T. Nguyen, Mark T. Jones
  • Publication number: 20140188216
    Abstract: Disclosed is an expandable transluminal sheath, for introduction into the body while in a first, small cross-sectional area configuration, and subsequent expansion of at least a part of the distal end of the sheath to a second, enlarged cross-sectional configuration. The sheath is configured for use in the vascular system and has utility in the introduction and removal of implant delivery catheters. The access route is through the femoral arteries and the iliac arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is maintained in the first, low cross-sectional configuration during advancement to the arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is subsequently expanded using a radial dilatation device, which is removed prior to the introduction of implant delivery catheters.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 20, 2013
    Publication date: July 3, 2014
    Applicant: Onset Medical Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Bishop, Jay Lenker, Edward J. Nance, Huan T. Nguyen, Mark T. Jones
  • Patent number: 8728153
    Abstract: The sheath is configured for use in the vascular system and has utility in the introduction and removal of implant delivery catheters. The access route is through the ventricular myocardium, more specifically at the left ventricular apex, into the aortic root. The distal end of the sheath is maintained in the first, low cross-sectional configuration during advancement to the arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is subsequently expanded using a radial dilatation device, which is removed prior to the introduction of implant delivery catheters. In an exemplary application, the sheath includes a supported proximal end, a supported distal end, and a collapsible center section. Certain configurations of the sheath are capable of being inserted in a first, small cross-sectional configuration, being expanded diametrically to a second, larger cross-sectional configuration, and then being reduced to a diametrically small size for removal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 15, 2010
    Date of Patent: May 20, 2014
    Assignee: Onset Medical Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Bishop, Jay Lenker, Edward J. Nance, Huan T. Nguyen, Mark T. Jones
  • Patent number: 8668668
    Abstract: Disclosed is an expandable transluminal sheath, for introduction into the body while in a first, small cross-sectional area configuration, and subsequent expansion of at least a part of the distal end of the sheath to a second, enlarged cross-sectional configuration. The sheath is configured for use in the vascular system and has utility in the introduction and removal of implant delivery catheters. The access route is through the femoral arteries and the iliac arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is maintained in the first, low cross-sectional configuration during advancement to the arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is subsequently expanded using a radial dilatation device, which is removed prior to the introduction of implant delivery catheters. In an exemplary application, the sheath includes a supported proximal end, a supported distal end, and a collapsible center section.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 2008
    Date of Patent: March 11, 2014
    Assignee: Onset Medical Corporation
    Inventors: Joseph Bishop, Jay Lenker, Edward J. Nance, Huan T. Nguyen, Mark T. Jones
  • Publication number: 20130167871
    Abstract: Stacked inner and outer discs are mounted over an air blower inlet opening of each blower in a car wash system drying zone with matched sets of radial slots and spokes formed in each disc. An actuator rotates one disc between positions in which the set of slots in one disc is aligned with the set of slots in the other disc to allow air flow into the blower inlet to dry a car in the dryer zone to a position in which the set of spokes overlie the set of slots in the other disc to thereby block inlet air flow to reduce the load on a blower motor when a car is not in the dryer zone.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 3, 2012
    Publication date: July 4, 2013
    Applicant: PECO CORPORATION
    Inventor: Mark T. Jones
  • Patent number: 8473754
    Abstract: A hardware-facilitated secure software execution environment provides protection of both program instructions and data against unauthorized access and/or execution to maintain confidentiality and integrity of the software or the data during distribution, in external memories, and during execution. The secure computing environment is achieved by using a hardware-based security method and apparatus to provide protection against software privacy and tampering. A Harvard architecture CPU core is instantiated on the same silicon chip along with encryption management unit (EMU) circuitry and secure key management unit (SKU) circuitry. Credential information acquired from one or more sources is combined by the SKU circuitry to generate one or more security keys provided to the EMU for use in decrypting encrypted program instructions and/or data that is obtained from a non-secure, off-chip source such as an external RAM, an information storage device or other network source.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 20, 2007
    Date of Patent: June 25, 2013
    Assignees: Virginia Tech Intellectual Properties, Inc., Macaulay-Brown, Inc.
    Inventors: Mark T. Jones, Peter M. Athanas, Cameron D. Patterson, Joshua N. Edmison, Anthony Mahar, Benjamin J. Muzal, Barry L. Polakowski, Jonathan P. Graf
  • Publication number: 20110144690
    Abstract: Disclosed is an expandable transluminal sheath, for introduction into the body while in a first, small cross-sectional area configuration, and subsequent expansion of at least a part of the distal end of the sheath to a second, enlarged cross-sectional configuration. The sheath is configured for use in the vascular system and has utility in the introduction and removal of implant delivery catheters. The access route is through the ventricular myocardium, more specifically at the left ventricular apex, into the aortic root. The distal end of the sheath is maintained in the first, low cross-sectional configuration during advancement to the arteries into the aorta. The distal end of the sheath is subsequently expanded using a radial dilatation device, which is removed prior to the introduction of implant delivery catheters. In an exemplary application, the sheath includes a supported proximal end, a supported distal end, and a collapsible center section.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 15, 2010
    Publication date: June 16, 2011
    Inventors: Joseph Bishop, Jay Lenker, Edward J. Nance, Huan T. Nguyen, Mark T. Jones
  • Publication number: 20110112567
    Abstract: Disclosed is an expandable transluminal sheath, for introduction into the body while in a first, small cross-sectional area configuration, and subsequent expansion of at least a part of the distal end of the sheath to a second, enlarged cross-sectional configuration. The sheath is configured for use in the upper vascular system and has utility in the introduction and removal of therapeutic or diagnostic microcatheters. The access route is through the femoral arteries or the iliac arteries to the cerebrovasculature. The distal end of the sheath is maintained in the first, low cross-sectional configuration during advancement to the cerebrovasculature. The distal end of the sheath is subsequently expanded using a radial dilatation device, which is removed prior to the introduction of microcatheters.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 10, 2010
    Publication date: May 12, 2011
    Applicant: Onset Medical Corporation
    Inventors: Jay Lenker, Joseph Bishop, Mark T. Jones, Huan T. Nguyen
  • Publication number: 20100122095
    Abstract: A hardware-facilitated secure software execution environment provides protection of both program instructions and data against unauthorized access and/or execution to maintain confidentiality and integrity of the software or the data during distribution, in external memories, and during execution. The secure computing environment is achieved by using a hardware-based security method and apparatus to provide protection against software privacy and tampering. A Harvard architecture CPU core is instantiated on the same silicon chip along with encryption management unit (EMU) circuitry and secure key management unit (SKU) circuitry. Credential information acquired from one or more sources is combined by the SKU circuitry to generate one or more security keys provided to the EMU for use in decrypting encrypted program instructions and/or data that is obtained from a non-secure, off-chip source such as an external RAM, an information storage device or other network source.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 20, 2007
    Publication date: May 13, 2010
    Inventors: Mark T. Jones, Peter M. Athanas, Cameron D. Patterson, Joshua N. Edmison, Anthony Mahar, Benjamin J. Muzal, Barry L. Polakowski, Jonathan P. Graf
  • Patent number: 4869305
    Abstract: A doorknob cover that defeats facile rotation of a doorknob. Two layers of cloth or other low friction material are placed in juxtaposition with one another and joined at their respective outermost peripheral edges. A second attachment is made between the materials just radially inwardly of the outermost peripheral edge to form a toroidal cavity to receive a drawstring. The device is placed over a doorknob and the opposite ends of the drawstrings are tied together tightly so that the device cannot be removed from the doorknob unless the knot is first untied. Young children are unable to rotate a doorknob covered by the device due to the double layer of cloth and the low frictional engagement between the inner piece of cloth and the doorknob.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 14, 1988
    Date of Patent: September 26, 1989
    Inventor: Mark T. Jones
  • Patent number: D837468
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 9, 2017
    Date of Patent: January 1, 2019
    Inventor: Mark T. Jones