Patents by Inventor Shih-Wen Huang

Shih-Wen Huang 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: 20020086286
    Abstract: A method and device for rapidly, non-invasively and inexpensively differentiating between allergic rhinitis, upper respiratory tract viral infection and bacterial sinusitis, comprising a support strip upon which is fixed discrete indicators of pH, protein content, nitrite content, leukocyte esterase activity, and eosinophil content or other measure of a substance found in allergic secretions, such as TAME esterase, of a sample with which said reagent test strip is contacted. Contact of a nasal secretion with the device of this invention permits differentiation between allergic, bacterial and viral conditions, based on pH, protein content, leukocyte esterase activity, nitrite content, eosinophil content and TAME esterase activity. The invention further provides a novel means for collecting nasal secretions to facilitate differential diagnosis of sinusitis, upper respiratory tract viral infection and allergic rhinitis.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 13, 2001
    Publication date: July 4, 2002
    Inventors: Parker Small, Shih-Wen Huang, Ronald Kudla
  • Publication number: 20020086287
    Abstract: A method and device for rapidly, non-invasively and inexpensively differentiating between allergic rhinitis, upper respiratory tract viral infection and bacterial sinusitis, comprising a support strip upon which is fixed discrete indicators of pH, protein content, nitrite content, leukocyte esterase activity, and eosinophil content or other measure of a substance found in allergic secretions, such as TAME esterase, of a sample with which said reagent test strip is contacted. Contact of a nasal secretion with the device of this invention permits differentiation between allergic, bacterial and viral conditions, based on pH, protein content, leukocyte esterase activity, nitrite content, eosinophil content and TAME esterase activity. The invention further provides a novel means for collecting nasal secretions to facilitate differential diagnosis of sinusitis, upper respiratory tract viral infection and allergic rhinitis.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 13, 2001
    Publication date: July 4, 2002
    Inventors: Parker Small, Shih-Wen Huang, Ronald Kudla
  • Publication number: 20020081575
    Abstract: A method and device for rapidly, non-invasively and inexpensively differentiating between allergic rhinitis, upper respiratory tract viral infection and bacterial sinusitis, comprising a support strip upon which is fixed discrete indicators of pH, protein content, nitrite content, leukocyte esterase activity, and eosinophil content or other measure of a substance found in allergic secretions, such as TAME esterase, of a sample with which said reagent test strip is contacted. Contact of a nasal secretion with the device of this invention permits differentiation between allergic, bacterial and viral conditions, based on pH, protein content, leukocyte esterase activity, nitrite content, eosinophil content and TAME esterase activity. The invention further provides a novel means for collecting nasal secretions to facilitate differential diagnosis of sinusitis, upper respiratory tract viral infection and allergic rhinitis.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 13, 2001
    Publication date: June 27, 2002
    Inventors: Parker Small, Shih-Wen Huang, Ronald Kudla
  • Patent number: 5910421
    Abstract: This method for non-invasively, rapidly and simply distinguishing between allergies, viral infections and sinusitis involves testing nasal secretions, preferably with commercially available (Ames Division, Miles Laboratories, Inc., Elkhart, Ind. 46515; or from Boehringer Mannheim Corporation, Advanced Diagnostics, 9115 Hague Road, P.O. Box 50457, Indianapolis, Ind. 46250-0457) or novel, modified reagent test strips. The commercially available strips, also referred to as dipsticks, test for pH, protein, nitrite, glucose, ketone, white blood cell esterase, bilirubin and blood. In the method of this invention, a sample of a patient's nasal secretions is tested and, based on the pH, amount of protein, nitrite, esterase and a measure of eosinophil infiltration, it can quickly be determined if the patient is suffering from an allergy, from a viral infection or a bacterial infection. The method has the potential to supplant much more expensive and invasive clinical procedures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 25, 1996
    Date of Patent: June 8, 1999
    Assignee: University of Florida
    Inventors: Parker A. Small, Jr., Shih-Wen Huang