Patents by Inventor Scott R. Stanslaski

Scott R. Stanslaski 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: 20180350465
    Abstract: Techniques are described for real-time phase detection. For the phase detection, a signal is correlated with a frequency component of a frequency band whose phase is being detected, and the correlation includes predominantly decreasing weighting of past portions of the signals.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 7, 2018
    Publication date: December 6, 2018
    Inventors: Robert A. Corey, Gregory J. Loxtercamp, Heather Diane Orser, Scott R. Stanslaski, Jadin C. Jackson
  • Publication number: 20180304082
    Abstract: The disclosure describes a method and system or controlling symptoms of patients suffering from Parkinson's Disease. In some examples, one or more biomarkers indicative of a patient's present symptoms are determined. The biomarkers may be used to control therapy delivered to the patient in a closed-loop manner. In addition, biomarkers may be used as an indication of therapy effectiveness.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 29, 2018
    Publication date: October 25, 2018
    Inventors: Pedram Afshar, Timothy J. Denison, David E. Linde, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Patent number: 10095837
    Abstract: Techniques are described for real-time phase detection. For the phase detection, a signal is correlated with a frequency component of a frequency band whose phase is being detected, and the correlation includes predominantly decreasing weighting of past portions of the signals.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 2015
    Date of Patent: October 9, 2018
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert A. Corey, Gregory J. Loxtercamp, Heather Diane Orser, Scott R. Stanslaski, Jadin C. Jackson
  • Patent number: 10080898
    Abstract: Systems and method may be used for interfacing with a patient. Systems may include a plurality of electrodes in electrical communication with a processor. The processor may be configured to receive sense signals from electrodes and to determine the reliability of the received signal. A test tone signal comprising a test tone frequency may be applied, and the magnitude of the test tone frequency may be analyzed in the received signal. If it is determined that the magnitude of the test tone frequency is below a threshold, the system may take action, such as lowering the gain on an amplifier. Stimulation signals may be applied to the patient at a stimulation frequency simultaneously with one or both of receiving sense signals and providing the test tone signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 29, 2015
    Date of Patent: September 25, 2018
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Timothy J. Denison, Pedram Afshar, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Patent number: 10052486
    Abstract: In some examples, a phase locked loop (PLL) circuit outputs a timing signal having a frequency and phase that is the same as a patient signal that is an input to the PLL circuit. The PLL circuit includes or is coupled to a storage circuit that stores information needed to cause the PLL circuit to maintain the frequency of the timing signal to the same frequency even after the patient signal is not available as an input.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 16, 2016
    Date of Patent: August 21, 2018
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Timothy J. Denison, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Patent number: 10016606
    Abstract: The disclosure describes a method and system or controlling symptoms of patients suffering from Parkinson's Disease. In some examples, one or more biomarkers indicative of a patient's present symptoms are determined. The biomarkers may be used to control therapy delivered to the patient in a closed-loop manner. In addition, biomarkers may be used as an indication of therapy effectiveness.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 16, 2015
    Date of Patent: July 10, 2018
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Pedram Afshar, Timothy J. Denison, David E. Linde, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Publication number: 20180085585
    Abstract: Techniques are disclosed for delivering electrical stimulation therapy to a patient. In one example, a medical system delivers electrical stimulation therapy to a tissue of the patient via electrodes. The medical system determines a first change of a first sensed signal of the patient to movement by the patient and a second change of a second sensed signal of the patient to the movement by the patient. Based on the first change and the second change, the medical system selects one of the first sensed signal and the second sensed signal of the patient for controlling the electrical stimulation therapy. The medical system adjusts a level of at least one parameter of the electrical stimulation therapy based on the selected one of the first sensed signal and the second sensed signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 25, 2017
    Publication date: March 29, 2018
    Inventors: Scott R. Stanslaski, Timothy R. Abraham, Thomas Adamski, Timothy J. Denison, Robert S. Raike
  • Publication number: 20180085586
    Abstract: Techniques are disclosed for delivering electrical stimulation therapy to a patient. In one example, a medical system delivers electrical stimulation therapy to a tissue of the patient via electrodes. The medical system determines a first response of a first sensed signal of the patient to the electrical stimulation therapy and a second response of a second sensed signal of the patient to the electrical stimulation therapy. Based on the first response and the second response for controlling the electrical stimulation therapy, the medical system selects one of the first sensed signal and the second sensed signal of the patient. The medical system adjusts a level of at least one parameter of the electrical stimulation therapy based on the selected one of the first sensed signal and the second sensed signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 25, 2017
    Publication date: March 29, 2018
    Inventors: Scott R. Stanslaski, Timothy R. Abraham, Thomas Adamski, Timothy J. Denison, Robert S. Raike, Christopher Pulliam
  • Publication number: 20180085572
    Abstract: Techniques are disclosed for defining a homeostatic window for controlling delivery of electrical stimulation therapy to a patient. In one example, a method includes generating and delivering electrical stimulation therapy to tissue of a patient via electrodes. Further, the method includes adjusting a level of a parameter of the electrical stimulation therapy such that a signal of the patient is not less than a lower bound and not greater than an upper bound. The lower bound is determined to be the magnitude of the signal while receiving electrical stimulation therapy sufficient to reduce one or more symptoms of a disease while the patient was receiving medication for reduction of the one or more symptoms. Further, the upper bound is determined to be the magnitude of the signal while receiving electrical stimulation therapy sufficient to reduce the one or more symptoms when the patient was not receiving the medication.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 25, 2017
    Publication date: March 29, 2018
    Inventors: Scott R. Stanslaski, Thomas Adamski, Duane L. Bourget, Timothy J. Denison, Benjamin P. Isaacson, Eric J. Panken, Jeffrey Herron
  • Publication number: 20180071530
    Abstract: In some examples of selecting a target therapy delivery site for treating a patient condition, a relatively high frequency electrical stimulation signal is delivered to at least two areas within a first region (e.g., an anterior nucleus of the thalamus) of a brain of a patient, and changes in brain activity (e.g., as indicated by bioelectrical brain signals) within a second region (e.g., a hippocampus) of the brain of the patient in response to the delivered stimulation are determined. The target therapy delivery site, an electrode combination, or both, may be selected based on the changes in brain activity.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 8, 2017
    Publication date: March 15, 2018
    Inventors: Jonathon E. Giftakis, Timothy J. Denison, Paul H. Stypulkowski, Scott R. Stanslaski, Robert S. Raike, Mae Eng, David E. Linde, Thomas Adamski
  • Patent number: 9888861
    Abstract: Various embodiments concern identifying a biomarker in the presence of electrical stimulation. Various embodiments concern delivering electrical stimulation to a patient and sensing one or more signals while the electrical stimulation is being delivered, the one or more signals including data indicative of physiological activity. Various embodiments further include determining an intensity of the electrical stimulation and determining whether the data indicates the presence of a biomarker based on a variable threshold, the variable threshold being variable based on the intensity of the electrical stimulation. Various embodiments concern determining a relationship between stimulation intensity and a biomarker parameter to determine the variability of the variable threshold.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 20, 2012
    Date of Patent: February 13, 2018
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: David L. Carlson, Pedram Afshar, Timothy J. Denison, Jonathon E. Giftakis, David E. Linde, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Publication number: 20170304629
    Abstract: Various embodiments concern delivering electrical stimulation to the brain at a plurality of different levels of a stimulation parameter and sensing a bioelectrical response of the brain to delivery of the electrical stimulation for each of the plurality of different levels of the stimulation parameter. A suppression window of the stimulation parameter can be identified as having a suppression threshold as a lower boundary and an after-discharge threshold as an upper boundary based on the sensed bioelectrical responses. A therapy level of the stimulation parameter can be set for therapy delivery based on the suppression window. The therapy level of the stimulation parameter may be set closer to the suppression threshold than the after-discharge threshold within the suppression window. Data for hippocampal stimulation demonstrating a suppression window is presented.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 11, 2017
    Publication date: October 26, 2017
    Inventors: Jonathon E. Giftakis, Paul H. Stypulkowski, Timothy J. Denison, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Patent number: 9789302
    Abstract: A physiological signal of a patient is sensed with sense electrodes symmetrically arranged relative to a stimulation electrode. In some examples, a member includes a plurality of relatively small electrodes that are configured to function as both sense and stimulation electrodes. One or more of the electrodes may be selected as stimulation electrodes and two or more different electrodes of the member may be selected as sense electrodes that are symmetrically arranged relative to the one or more selected stimulation electrodes. In some examples, a member includes a plurality of levels of segmented sense electrodes and a plurality of levels of stimulation electrodes. The levels of sense electrodes are arranged such that each level of stimulation electrodes is adjacent at least two levels of sense electrodes symmetrically arranged relative to the level of stimulation electrodes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 1, 2010
    Date of Patent: October 17, 2017
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Gabriela C. Molnar, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Patent number: 9724517
    Abstract: Various embodiments concern delivering electrical stimulation to the brain at a plurality of different levels of a stimulation parameter and sensing a bioelectrical response of the brain to delivery of the electrical stimulation for each of the plurality of different levels of the stimulation parameter. A suppression window of the stimulation parameter can be identified as having a suppression threshold as a lower boundary and an after-discharge threshold as an upper boundary based on the sensed bioelectrical responses. A therapy level of the stimulation parameter can be set for therapy delivery based on the suppression window. The therapy level of the stimulation parameter may be set closer to the suppression threshold than the after-discharge threshold within the suppression window. Data for hippocampal stimulation demonstrating a suppression window is presented.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 2014
    Date of Patent: August 8, 2017
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Jonathon E. Giftakis, Paul H. Stypulkowski, Timothy J. Denison, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Patent number: 9724521
    Abstract: In some examples, one or more processors determine characteristics of frequency components of a sensed bioelectrical signal. In response to determining the characteristics, the one or more processors determine therapy parameters for frequency components of a stimulation signal. The one or more processors may determine the therapy parameters based on the characteristics of the frequency components of the sensed bioelectrical signal. As another example, the one or more processors may determine the therapy parameters based on received information after the characteristics of the frequency components of the sensed bioelectrical signal are displayed to a user.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 9, 2015
    Date of Patent: August 8, 2017
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Peng Cong, Timothy J. Denison, Gabriela C. Molnar, Forrest C. M. Pape, Scott R. Stanslaski, Wesley A. Santa
  • Patent number: 9717428
    Abstract: Devices and methods provide for the sensing of physiological signals during stimulation therapy by preventing stimulation waveform artifacts from being passed through to the amplification of the sensed physiological signal. Thus, the sensing amplifier is not adversely affected by the stimulation waveform and can provide for successful sensing of physiological signals. A common mode voltage is applied to the stimulation electrodes while sensing during a recharge period where the common mode voltage approximates the stimulation pulse being received at the sensing electrodes. This common mode voltage is determined based on measuring a common mode signal for at least one of the inputs of the amplifier or by deriving the proper common mode from monitoring the output signal of the amplifier to observe the elimination of artifacts during stimulation. Blanking switches may be used to blank the sensing of the peak of the recharge period should that peak be relatively large.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 7, 2014
    Date of Patent: August 1, 2017
    Assignee: MEDTRONIC, INC.
    Inventors: Peng Cong, Timothy J. Denison, Forrest C. M. Pape, Wesley A. Santa, Jalpa S. Shah, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Publication number: 20170065819
    Abstract: Techniques, devices, and systems for isolating, by isolation circuitry connected to a power source, a voltage from the power source, receiving, by sensing circuitry, the isolated voltage, receiving, by the sensing circuitry, a reference voltage from an implantable reference electrode via a reference node, and sensing, by the sensing circuitry, the biomedical signal with two or more implantable sensing electrodes using the isolated voltage with respect to the reference voltage.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 15, 2016
    Publication date: March 9, 2017
    Inventors: David A. Dinsmoor, Scott R. Stanslaski, Erik J. Peterson, Paul R. Mazanec
  • Patent number: 9521979
    Abstract: This disclosure describes techniques for controlling spectral aggressors in a sensing device that uses a chopper amplifier to amplify an input signal prior to sampling the signal. In some examples, the techniques for controlling spectral aggressors may include generating a chopper-stabilized amplified version of an input signal based on a chopper frequency, sampling the chopper-stabilized amplified version of the input signal at a sampling rate to generate a sampled signal, and analyzing a target frequency band of the sampled signal. The chopper frequency and the sampling rate may cause spectral interference that is generated due to the chopper frequency to occur in the sampled signal at one or more frequencies that are outside of the target frequency band of the sampled signal. The techniques for controlling spectral aggressors may reduce the noise caused by the chopper frequency in the resulting sampled signal, thereby improving the quality of the signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 12, 2013
    Date of Patent: December 20, 2016
    Assignee: Medtronic, Inc.
    Inventors: Scott R. Stanslaski, David L. Carlson, Peng Cong, Timothy J. Denison, David E. Linde, Randy M. Jensen
  • Publication number: 20160346548
    Abstract: Systems and method may be used for interfacing with a patient. Systems may include a plurality of electrodes in electrical communication with a processor. The processor may be configured to receive sense signals from electrodes and to determine the reliability of the received signal. A test tone signal comprising a test tone frequency may be applied, and the magnitude of the test tone frequency may be analyzed in the received signal. If it is determined that the magnitude of the test tone frequency is below a threshold, the system may take action, such as lowering the gain on an amplifier. Stimulation signals may be applied to the patient at a stimulation frequency simultaneously with one or both of receiving sense signals and providing the test tone signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 29, 2015
    Publication date: December 1, 2016
    Inventors: Timothy J. Denison, Pedram Afshar, Scott R. Stanslaski
  • Publication number: 20160346534
    Abstract: Systems and method may be used for interfacing with a patient. Systems may include a plurality of electrodes in electrical communication with a processor. The processor may determine a relative impedance difference between a first electrode and a second electrode, and apply a sub-therapeutic stimulation pulse to one of the first and second electrodes to adjust the relative impedance difference therebetween. Systems may include a processor capable of one or both of providing therapeutic stimulation to a patient via at least one electrode, and receiving electrical signals indicative of the patient's physiological activity. In some examples, the processor may simultaneously provide therapeutic stimulation to a patient and receive electrical signals from the patient indicative of the patient's physiological activity.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 29, 2015
    Publication date: December 1, 2016
    Inventors: Benjamin P. Isaacson, Timothy J. Denison, Kunal J. Paralikar, Scott R. Stanslaski