Patents by Inventor Vinnie Quinn

Vinnie Quinn 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: 6496557
    Abstract: An x-ray system using a slot-shaped detector having n rows and m columns of pixels, where n<<m, and providing a variety of relative motions between a patient table and a source-detector unit, including translation along the length of the table, translation across the table, and rotation about the focal spot, and processing the pixel values in a variety of ways to produce information such a shadow graphic x-ray images, tomosynthetic images of surfaces that need not be planar, and bone density estimates. In another embodiment, tomographic images can be obtained directly, using a post-patient collimator that passes nearly all of the primary beam to the imager while eliminating nearly all of the scatter. A feedback loop can equalize the exposure for selected parts of the image substantially in real time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 22, 2001
    Date of Patent: December 17, 2002
    Assignee: Hologic, Inc.
    Inventors: Kevin E. Wilson, Jay A. Stein, Richard Cabral, Andrew P. Smith, Vinnie Quinn
  • Publication number: 20010048732
    Abstract: An x-ray system using a slot-shaped detector having n rows and m columns of pixels, where n<<m, and providing a variety of relative motions between a patient table and a source-detector unit, including translation along the length of the table, translation across the table, and rotation about the focal spot, and processing the pixel values in a variety of ways to produce information such a shadow graphic x-ray images, tomosynthetic images of surfaces that need not be planar, and bone density estimates. In another embodiment, tomographic images can be obtained directly, using a post-patient collimator that passes nearly all of the primary beam to the imager while eliminating nearly all of the scatter. A feedback loop can equalize the exposure for selected parts of the image substantially in real time.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 22, 2001
    Publication date: December 6, 2001
    Inventors: Kevin E. Wilson, Jay A. Stein, Richard Cabral, Andrew P. Smith, Vinnie Quinn