Patent classifications
A61B5/6849
Drug delivery system with sensor having optimized communication and infusion site
A drug delivery system having a drug delivery device and an associated sensor is provided. The sensor can be associated with a sensing site on user. The drug delivery device can be positioned over the sensor in any rotational position and can be associated with an infusion site on the user. The close positioning of the sensor and the drug delivery device allows data from the sensor to be relayed to the drug delivery device and then on to a remote control device. Further, the drug delivery device can be replaced at the end of its duration of use, which is shorter than the duration of use of the sensor, without disturbing the sensor. Subsequent drug delivery devices can then be used with the sensor while allowing each corresponding infusion site to be changed, thereby providing more efficient operation of the drug delivery system.
Elastic physiological patch
An elastic physiological patch includes a patch assembly and an implant assembly. The patch assembly includes an electronic device, and a soft patch body defining a chamber for receiving the electronic device. The implant assembly is mountable to the electronic device and includes an implant which is capable of being driven to partially pass through the patch body and which is adapted to be implanted in the skin of a subject. The implant and the patch body cooperatively seal the chamber.
SENSOR UNIT FOR CONTINUOUS BLOOD GLUCOSE MEASUREMENT
The present disclosure relates to a sensor member for continuous blood glucose measurement, wherein a first electrode layer and a second electrode layer are laminated to be misaligned from each other in the process of forming an electrode layer of the sensor member for continuous blood glucose measurement, so that an electrical contact phenomenon between the first electrode layer and the second electrode layer, which may occur in the process of cutting both side surfaces of the sensor member in the widthwise direction, is prevented, and accordingly, product defects are prevented and the stability of the sensor performance is improved.
Application of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy in sensor systems, devices, and related methods
A diagnostic Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) procedure is applied to measure values of impedance-related parameters for one or more sensing electrodes. The parameters may include real impedance, imaginary impedance, impedance magnitude, and/or phase angle. The measured values of the impedance-related parameters are then used in performing sensor diagnostics, calculating a highly-reliable fused sensor glucose value based on signals from a plurality of redundant sensing electrodes, calibrating sensors, detecting interferents within close proximity of one or more sensing electrodes, and testing surface area characteristics of electroplated electrodes. Advantageously, impedance-related parameters can be defined that are substantially glucose-independent over specific ranges of frequencies. An Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) enables implementation of the EIS-based diagnostics, fusion algorithms, and other processes based on measurement of EIS-based parameters.
Applicators for applying transcutaneous analyte sensors and associated methods of manufacture
- Joseph J. Baker ,
- Philip Thomas Pupa ,
- Timothy Joseph Goldsmith ,
- Jonathan Bodnar ,
- Jason Halac ,
- John Michael Gray ,
- Neal Davis Johnston ,
- Justen Deering England ,
- Peter C. Simpson ,
- Paul V. Neale ,
- Jennifer Blackwell ,
- Maria Noel Brown Wells ,
- Kenneth Pirondini ,
- Andrew Michael Reinhardt ,
- Mark Douglas Kempkey ,
- Young Woo Lee ,
- Warren Terry ,
- Patrick John Castagna ,
- David A. Keller ,
- Randall Scott Koplin ,
- Andrew Joncich ,
- Nirav Bhatt
Applicators for applying an on-skin assembly to skin of a host and methods of their use and/or manufacture are provided. An applicator includes an insertion assembly configured to insert at least a portion of the on-skin assembly into the skin of the host, a housing configured to house the insertion assembly, the housing comprising an aperture through which the on-skin assembly can pass, an actuation member configured to, upon activation, cause the insertion assembly to insert at least the portion of the on-skin assembly into the skin of the host, and a sealing element configured to provide a sterile barrier and a vapor barrier between an internal environment of the housing and an external environment of the housing.
SENSOR INSERTION DEVICE AND SENSOR INSERTION DEVICE SET
A sensor insertion device includes: a housing; a needle member comprising a needle portion configured to be inserted in the living body with a sensor and to be movable in the housing in an insertion direction and a pulling-out direction; a first urging member configured to urge the needle member in the insertion direction to move the needle member to a first position; a second urging member configured to urge the needle member in the pulling-out direction to move the needle member that has reached the first position to a second position; and a switching mechanism configured to perform selective switching from movement of the needle member by an urging force of the first urging member to movement of the needle member by an urging force of the second urging member when the needle member reaches the first position.
System for analyzing a patient using a transcutaneous sensor
A system for analyzing a patient using a transcutaneous sensor, having a base unit for attaching to the patient, an injector, releasably connectable to the base unit, for the transcutaneous insertion of the sensor into the patient, and a detection unit, releasably connectable to the base unit, for generating measurement data by the sensor. The base unit has a holding device which is configured to cooperate with the injector and detection unit such that, in a detection configuration with the detection unit arranged on the base unit, a contact pressure is applied to the sensor by the holding device for frictional fixing, and in an injection configuration with the injector arranged on the base unit, a lower contact pressure than in the detection configuration is applied to the sensor by the holding device.
Insertion device
An insertion apparatus and a method for use with a device for delivery of a therapeutic fluid into a body of a patient and/or for sensing of a bodily analyte are disclosed. The apparatus includes a housing adapted for loading therein at least one cannula cartridge unit having a protective member. The protective member accommodates at least one penetrating cartridge having a subcutaneously insertable element and a penetrating member. The apparatus includes a displacement mechanism capable of protracting the penetrating cartridge towards the body of the patient, where protraction of the penetrating cartridge results in insertion of the subcutaneously insertable element into the body of the patient.
Physiological recording device or electrode
The present invention is directed to a physiological recording device, or other types of sensors to detect a biopotential, and more particularly, a physiological recording electrode that can be used without skin preparation or the use of electrolytic gels. The invention is further directed to the configurations of structures on the physiological recording electrode's lower surface. The structures having a length, width, and height, which are capable, at least in part, of transmitting an electric potential from the skin which can be measured. The structures may or may not limit the depth of application, and/or anchor the electrode or other device during normal application, and/or allow for uniform application of the electrode or other device over unprepared skin.
Applicators for applying transcutaneous analyte sensors and associated methods of manufacture
- Joseph J. Baker ,
- Philip Thomas Pupa ,
- Timothy Joseph Goldsmith ,
- Jonathan Bodnar ,
- Jason Halac ,
- John Michael Gray ,
- Neal Davis Johnston ,
- Justen Deering England ,
- Peter C. Simpson ,
- Paul V. Neale ,
- Jennifer Blackwell ,
- Maria Noel Brown Wells ,
- Kenneth Pirondini ,
- Andrew Michael Reinhardt ,
- Mark Douglas Kempkey ,
- Young Woo Lee ,
- Warren Terry ,
- Patrick John Castagna ,
- David A. Keller ,
- Randall Scott Koplin ,
- Andrew Joncich ,
- Nirav Bhatt
Applicators for applying an on-skin assembly to skin of a host and methods of their use and/or manufacture are provided. An applicator includes an insertion assembly configured to insert at least a portion of the on-skin assembly into the skin of the host, a housing configured to house the insertion assembly, the housing comprising an aperture through which the on-skin assembly can pass, an actuation member configured to, upon activation, cause the insertion assembly to insert at least the portion of the on-skin assembly into the skin of the host, and a sealing element configured to provide a sterile barrier and a vapor barrier between an internal environment of the housing and an external environment of the housing.