Patents by Inventor Scott Fischell

Scott Fischell 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: 11944373
    Abstract: An intravascular catheter for peri-vascular and/or peri-urethral tissue ablation includes multiple needles advanced through supported guide tubes which expand around a central axis to engage the interior surface of the wall of the renal artery or other vessel of a human body allowing the injection an ablative fluid for ablating tissue, and/or nerve fibers in the outer layer or deep to the outer layer of the vessel, or in prostatic tissue. The system may also include a means to limit and/or adjust the depth of penetration of the ablative fluid into and beyond the tissue of the vessel wall. The catheter may also include structures which provide radial and/or lateral support to the guide tubes so that the guide tubes expand uniformly and maintain their position against the interior surface of the vessel wall as the sharpened injection needles are advanced to penetrate into the vessel wall.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 11, 2021
    Date of Patent: April 2, 2024
    Assignee: Ablative Solutions, Inc.
    Inventors: David R. Fischell, Tim A. Fischell, Robert Ryan Ragland, Darrin James Kent, Andy Edward Denison, Eric Thomas Johnson, Jeff Alan Burke, Christopher Scott Hayden
  • Publication number: 20070142886
    Abstract: Disclosed is a means and method for the treatment of migraine headaches and other disorders of the human body by the application of one or more intense magnetic pulses. By placing an intense magnetic field pulse(s) onto a certain region of the brain, an electrical current can be generated in the cerebral cortex that can stop a migraine headache in some patients or at least decrease its severity. The device to perform this function can be called a “magnetic pulser system.” This system can be made in one piece and powered by plugging into a household or automobile receptacle or from a battery. The pulser system uses capacitors that are first charged to a high voltage and then discharged into a coil that creates the intense magnetic pulse. Both visual and auditory signals can be provided by the pulser system to assist the patient in using the device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 19, 2005
    Publication date: June 21, 2007
    Inventors: Robert Fischell, Scott Fischell, David Fischell, Emily Ma, Kuen Chang, Dave Vondle, Benjamin Pless
  • Publication number: 20070083253
    Abstract: A thin-walled guide wire tube is fixedly and sealably attached to both a proximal section and a distal section of a balloon angioplasty catheter. A stent is co-axially mounted onto the inflatable balloon of the balloon angioplasty catheter. Because the guide wire tube forms an inner liner for the balloon angioplasty catheter, the fluid inflation lumen of the catheter is sealed so the inflation liquid that pressurizes the balloon will not leak as it would be if there were no “inner liner” and the balloon angioplasty catheter were attached to the guide wire itself. By not having a traditional inner shaft through which a conventional guide wire slides, the deflated balloon on which the stent is mounted can have a reduced diameter.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 6, 2005
    Publication date: April 12, 2007
    Inventors: David Fischell, Robert Fischell, Tim Fischell, Scott Fischell
  • Publication number: 20060047316
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system and method for treating migraine headaches employing a readily portable magnetic pulse system that has a head unit connected to a table unit by means of a connecting cable. When a patient senses either the aura of a migraine headache or an ongoing headache, he would turn the table unit on and then press a charge button to charge at least one capacitor in the head unit. When the at least one capacitor is fully charged, the patient would then place the head unit onto his head and then press a button switch that causes the at least one capacitor to discharge into an electromagnetic coil located in the head unit. The high intensity electric current in the electromagnetic coil would then create a high intensity, short duration magnetic pulse onto the patient's brain which can decrease the intensity or duration of the migraine headache.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 31, 2004
    Publication date: March 2, 2006
    Inventors: Robert Fischell, Scott Fischell, Adrian Upton
  • Publication number: 20050281860
    Abstract: An anti-proliferative drug, such as rapamycin or taxol, is placed onto or within a sheet of material or mesh. The strands onto or into which the drug is placed may be either a permanent implant or it may be biodegradable. Surgical sutures or staples may also be coated and used for connecting human tissues (i.e., for example, an anastomosis).
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 21, 2005
    Publication date: December 22, 2005
    Applicant: Afmedica, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert Fischell, David Fischell, Tim Fischell, Scott Fischell
  • Publication number: 20050060017
    Abstract: Disclosed is a system for the treatment of cerebral aneurysms using a stent and a aneurysm pocket fill structure delivery system. One embodiment of the present invention uses a highly radiopaque, drug eluting stent that is deployed with its sidewall over the ostium of the aneurysm pocket. A fill structure delivery catheter is then advanced through the patient's vascular system until the catheter's distal end is situated within the aneurysm pocket. Compressed aneurysm pocket filling structures are then pushed through the fill structure delivery catheter. As the aneurysm pocket filling structures emerge from an opening in the catheter's distal end, they promptly expand so that their minimum dimension is sufficiently large so that they cannot pass through the spaces between the struts of the stent that cover the ostium of the aneurysm pocket.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 15, 2003
    Publication date: March 17, 2005
    Inventors: Robert Fischell, Scott Fischell