Claims
- 1. An angioplasty balloon catheter useable to treat arterial stenosis, comprising a gas input lumen for supplying a pressurized gas, a first inflatable balloon containing a first variable volume, and a Joule-Thomson orifice for passing said pressurized gas from said gas input lumen into said first variable volume so as to cool and inflate said first inflatable balloon.
- 2. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising a first gas exhaust lumen for exhausting gas from said first variable volume of said first inflatable balloon.
- 3. The catheter of claim 2, further comprising an exhaust control valve for controlling exit of exhaust gasses from said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 4. The catheter of claim 3, wherein said exhaust control valve is operable to regulate pressure within said first variable volume.
- 5. The catheter of claim 2, further comprising a heat exchanging configuration designed and constructed to facilitate transference of heat energy between said gas input lumen and said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 6. The catheter of claim 2, wherein at least a portion of said first gas exhaust lumen is positioned contiguous to at least a portion of said gas input lumen, thereby constituting a heat exchanging configuration.
- 7. The catheter of claim 5, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said gas input lumen is positioned within said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 8. The catheter of claim 7, wherein a section of said gas input lumen, positioned within said first gas exhaust lumen, comprises fins for facilitating heat exchange.
- 9. The catheter of claim 5, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said first gas exhaust lumen is positioned within said gas input lumen.
- 10. The catheter of claim 9, wherein a section of said first gas exhaust lumen, positioned within said gas input lumen, comprises fins for facilitating heat exchange.
- 11. The catheter of claim 5, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said gas input lumen is spirally wrapped around said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 12. The catheter of claim 5, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said first gas exhaust lumen is spirally wrapped around said gas input lumen.
- 13. The catheter of claim 5, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a secondary Joule-Thomson orifice connected to a source of compressed gas.
- 14. The catheter of claim 1, wherein said Joule-Thomson orifice is shaped and oriented so as to induce in gasses passing therethrough into said first variable volume a motion selected from a group consisting of circular motion, swirling motion, and turbulent motion.
- 15. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising a plurality of Joule-Thomson orifices.
- 16. The catheter of claim 14, further comprising a plurality of Joule-Thomson orifices shaped and oriented so as to induce in gasses passing therethrough into said first variable volume a motion selected from a group consisting of circular motion, swirling motion, and turbulent motion.
- 17. The catheter of claim 14, wherein said first variable volume of said first inflatable balloon further comprises a flow control structure designed and constructed to influence circulation of moving gasses within said first variable volume.
- 18. The catheter of claim 17, wherein said flow control structure comprises at least one of a group consisting of flow directors for enhancing circular flow, multiple internal channels for subdividing flow, and spoilers for increasing turbulence.
- 19. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising a second inflatable balloon hermetically containing said first inflatable balloon and defining a second variable volume interior to said second inflatable balloon and exterior to said first inflatable balloon.
- 20. The catheter of claim 19, further comprising a heat-transmitting material contained within said second volume.
- 21. The catheter of claim 20, wherein said heat-transmitting material is selected from a group consisting of a liquid material and a gel material.
- 22. The catheter of claim 19, further comprising a second gas exhaust lumen for exhausting gas from said second volume.
- 23. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising a guide-wire lumen enabling passage of a guide wire through said catheter.
- 24. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising an injection lumen suitable for injecting a contrast medium near a distal portion of said catheter.
- 25. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising a moveable thermal sensor operable to report external temperatures at selected positions along a selected length of said catheter, thereby enabling said catheter to report a temperature gradient along a selected segment of a body conduit when said catheter is inserted into said body conduit and said moveable thermal sensor is moved along said catheter.
- 26. The catheter of claim 25, wherein said moveable sensor is a fiber optic element moveable along said catheter and connectable to a thermographic camera external to said catheter.
- 27. The catheter of claim 1, further comprising a plurality of thermal sensors operable to report external temperatures along a selected length of said catheter, thereby enabling said catheter to report a temperature gradient along a selected segment of a body conduit when said catheter is inserted into said body conduit.
- 28. The catheter of claim 27, wherein said thermal sensors are selected from a group comprising a thermocouple sensor, a thermographic camera sensor, and a fiber-optic element connectable to a thermographic camera sensor external to said catheter.
- 29. The catheter of claim 27, wherein said thermal sensors are spirally configured around and along a section of said catheter.
- 30. The catheter of claim 27, further including a data communication element for communicating data generated by said thermal sensors to a data receiver outside of said catheter.
- 31. The catheter of claim 30, wherein said data communication element comprises a wire.
- 32. The catheter of claim 30, wherein said data communication element comprises a wireless communicator.
- 33. The catheter of claim 27, wherein at least one of said plurality of thermal sensors comprises a hair-like fiber for enhancing transmission of heat between said at least one sensor and a body tissue adjacent to said sensor.
- 34. The catheter of claim 27, wherein said plurality of thermal sensors are distributed along an expandable spiral sensing loop having a distal end anchored to a distal portion of said catheter, said sensing loop being spirally wound around a section of shaft of said catheter and being operable to expand away from said shaft, thereby enhancing thermal communication between said sensors distributed along said sensing loop and body tissues adjacent to said catheter.
- 35. The catheter of claim 34, wherein said spiral sensing loop is designed and constructed to expand away from said shaft of said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing loop is pushed toward said anchored distal end of said sensing loop.
- 36. The catheter of claim 34, wherein said spiral sensing loop is designed and constructed to contract toward said shaft of said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing loop is pulled away from said anchored distal end of said sensing loop.
- 37. A thermal sensing device designed and constructed to be spirally wrapped around a catheter insertable into a body conduit, said thermal sensing device having a distal end designed and constructed to be anchored to a distal portion of said catheter, said thermal sensing device comprising a plurality of thermal sensors mounted on a spring-like spiral base operable to expand away from said catheter, said expansion enhancing thermal contact between said thermal sensors and tissue of said body conduit, thereby enabling said thermal sensing device to report tissue temperatures along a selected length of said body conduit.
- 38. The thermal sensing device of claim 37, designed and constructed to expand away from said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing device is pushed toward said anchored distal end of said sensing device.
- 39. The thermal sensing device of claim 37, designed and constructed to contract towards said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing device is pulled away from said anchored distal end of said sensing device.
- 40. An angioplasty balloon catheter comprising a moveable thermal sensor operable to report external temperatures along a selected length of said catheter, and thereby operable to report a temperature gradient along a selected segment of a body conduit when said catheter is inserted into said conduit and said sensor is moved along said catheter.
- 41. The catheter of claim 40, wherein said moveable sensor is a fiber optic element moveable along said catheter and connectable to a thermographic camera external to said catheter.
- 42. An angioplasty balloon catheter comprising a plurality of thermal sensors operable to report external temperatures along a selected length of said catheter, said catheter being operable to report a temperature gradient along a selected segment of a body conduit when said catheter is inserted into said body conduit.
- 43. The catheter of claim 42, wherein said thermal sensors are selected from a group comprising a thermocouple sensor, a thermographic camera sensor, and a fiber-optic element connectable to a thermographic camera sensor external to said catheter.
- 44. The catheter of claim 42, wherein said thermal sensors are arranged in a spiral configuration around and along a section of said catheter.
- 45. The catheter of claim 42, further including a data communication element for communicating data generated by said thermal sensors to a data receiver outside of said catheter.
- 46. The catheter of claim 45, wherein said data communication element comprises a wire.
- 47. The catheter of claim 45, wherein said data communication element comprises a wireless communicator.
- 48. The catheter of claim 42, wherein at least one of said plurality of thermal sensors comprises a hair-like fiber for enhancing transmission of heat between said at least one sensor and a body tissue adjacent to said sensor.
- 49. The catheter of claim 42, wherein said plurality of thermal sensors are distributed along an expandable spiral sensing loop having a distal end anchored to a distal portion of said catheter, said sensing loop being spirally wound around a section of shaft of said catheter and being operable to expand away from said shaft, thereby enhancing thermal communication between said sensors distributed along said sensing loop and body tissues adjacent to said catheter.
- 50. The catheter of claim 49, wherein said spiral sensing loop is designed and constructed to expand away from said shaft of said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing loop is pushed toward said anchored distal end of said sensing loop.
- 51. The catheter of claim 49, wherein said spiral sensing loop is designed and constructed to contract toward said shaft of said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing loop is pulled away from said anchored distal end of said sensing loop.
- 52. A system for angioplastic treatment of arterial stenosis and for reducing restenosis, comprising:
a) An angioplasty balloon catheter useable to treat arterial stenosis, having a gas input lumen for supplying a pressurized gas, a first inflatable balloon containing a first variable volume, and a Joule-Thomson orifice for passing said pressurized gas from said gas input lumen into said first variable volume of said first inflatable balloon so as to cool and inflate said first inflatable balloon; b) a supply of compressed cooling gas operable to supply cooling gas to said gas input lumen; and c) a cooling gas input valve controlling delivery of compressed cooling gas from said supply of compressed cooling gas to said gas input lumen.
- 53. The system of claim 52, wherein said angioplasty balloon catheter further comprises a first gas exhaust lumen for exhausting gas from said first variable volume of said first inflatable balloon.
- 54. The system of claim 53, further comprising a gas exhaust valve for controlling passage of gas out of said gas exhaust lumen.
- 55. The system of claim 53, wherein said angioplasty balloon catheter further comprises a heat exchanging configuration designed and constructed to facilitate transference of heat energy between said gas input lumen and said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 56. The system of claim 53, wherein at least a portion of said first gas exhaust lumen is positioned contiguous to at least a portion of said gas input lumen, thereby constituting a heat exchanging configuration.
- 57. The system of claim 55, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said gas input lumen is positioned within said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 58. The system of claim 57, wherein a section of said gas input lumen, positioned within said first gas exhaust lumen, comprises fins for facilitating heat exchange.
- 59. The system of claim 55, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said first gas exhaust lumen is positioned within said gas input lumen.
- 60. The system of claim 59, wherein a section of said first gas exhaust lumen, positioned within said gas input lumen, comprises fins for facilitating heat exchange.
- 61. The system of claim 55, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said gas input lumen is spirally wrapped around said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 62. The system of claim 55, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a section wherein said first gas exhaust lumen is spirally wrapped around said gas input lumen.
- 63. The system of claim 55, wherein said heat exchanging configuration comprises a secondary Joule-Thomson orifice connected to a source of compressed gas.
- 64. The system of claim 52, wherein said Joule-Thomson orifice is shaped and oriented so as to induce in gasses passing therethrough into said first variable volume a motion selected from a group consisting of circular motion, swirling motion, and turbulent motion.
- 65. The system of claim 52, wherein said first inflatable balloon further comprises a plurality of Joule-Thomson orifices.
- 66. The system of claim 64, wherein said first inflatable balloon further comprises a plurality of Joule-Thomson orifices shaped and oriented so as to induce in gasses passing therethrough into said first variable volume a motion selected from a group consisting of circular motion, swirling motion, and turbulent motion.
- 67. The system of claim 52, wherein said first variable volume of said first inflatable balloon further comprises a flow control structure designed and constructed to influence circulation of moving gasses within said first variable volume.
- 68. The system of claim 67, wherein said flow control structure comprises at least one of a group consisting of flow directors for enhancing circular flow, multiple internal channels for subdividing flow, and spoilers for increasing turbulence.
- 69. The system of claim 52, wherein said catheter further comprises a second inflatable balloon hermetically containing said first inflatable balloon and defining a second variable volume interior to said second inflatable balloon and exterior to said first inflatable balloon.
- 70. The system of claim 69, further comprising a heat-transmitting material contained within said second variable volume.
- 71. The system of claim 70, wherein said heat-transmitting material is selected from a group consisting of a liquid material and a gel material.
- 72. The system of claim 52, wherein said angioplasty balloon catheter further comprises a guide-wire lumen enabling passage of a guide wire through said catheter.
- 73. The system of claim 52, further comprising an injection lumen suitable for injecting a contrast medium near a distal portion of said catheter.
- 74. The system of claim 52, further comprising a second gas exhaust lumen for exhausting gas from said second internal volume.
- 75. The system of claim 74, further comprising a helium detector operable to detect presence of helium in said second gas exhaust lumen.
- 76. The system of claim 53, further comprising a supply of compressed heating gas operable to supply heating gas to said gas input lumen.
- 77. The system of claim 76, further comprising a heating gas input valve controlling delivery of compressed heating gas from said supply of compressed heating gas to said gas input lumen.
- 78. The system of claim 52, further comprising a supply of a gas mixture comprising compressed cooling gas and compressed heating gas.
- 79. The system of claim 78, further comprising a mixed-gas input valve controlling delivery of mixed gas from said supply of a gas mixture to said gas input lumen.
- 80. The system of claim 78, further comprising a gas-proportion input valve controlling a ratio of cooling gas to heating gas in said supplied mixture of compressed cooling gas and compressed heating gas.
- 81. The system of claim 78, further comprising a gas-proportion input valve system controlling a ratio of cooling gas to heating gas in said supplied mixture of compressed cooling gas and compressed heating gas.
- 82. The system of claim 78, wherein said supply of a gas mixture comprising compressed cooling gas and compressed heating gas is operable to supply a gas which produces no significant thermal effect when passed from a region of high pressure to a region of low pressure through a Joule-Thomson orifice.
- 83. The system of claim 82, wherein said supply of a gas mixture is operable in a first time to supply a gas which produces no significant thermal effect when passed from a region of high pressure to a region of low pressure through a Joule-Thomson orifice, and further operable in a second time to supply a cooling gas.
- 84. The system of claim 52, further comprising a vacuum pump for rapidly withdrawing gas from said first variable volume of said first inflatable balloon through said first gas exhaust lumen.
- 85. The system of claim 74, further comprising a vacuum pump for rapidly withdrawing gas from said second internal volume through said second gas exhaust lumen.
- 86. The system of claim 52, further comprising a control unit for controlling functioning of said catheter, said control unit comprising:
a) a data collection unit for receiving data generated by at least one sensor positioned in or near a distal portion of said catheter; b) a processing unit for evaluating data received by said data collection unit according to a stored algorithm; and c) a command module for sending commands to at least one remotely controlled gas flow valve.
- 87. The system of claim 86, where said at least one sensor is a thermal sensor.
- 88. The system of claim 86, wherein said processing unit comprises a processor and a memory, said memory is operable to record at least a portion of said received data.
- 89. The system of claim 88, wherein said processing unit comprises a display operable to display functional data received by said data collection unit.
- 90. The system of claim 88, wherein said processing unit is designed and constructed to respond to said received data by evaluating said data under algorithmic control and to generate commands to be sent to at least one remotely controlled gas flow valve based on said evaluation.
- 91. The system of claim 90, wherein said control unit is operable to substantially maintain a portion of said catheter near a selected temperature by sending appropriate commands to at least one selected gas flow control valve, said sent commands being chosen according to an algorithm in response to data received from said at least one sensor.
- 92. The system of claim 90, where said at least one selected gas flow control valve is selected from a group comprising a cooling gas input valve, a heating gas input valve, a mixed-gas input valve, and a gas exhaust valve.
- 93. The system of claim 53, wherein said cooling gas supply further comprises a pre-cooling heat exchanging configuration for pre-cooling supplied cooling gas by exchanging heat between said supplied cooling gas and said gas exhaust lumen.
- 94. The system of claim 76, wherein said cooling gas supply further comprises a pre-cooling heat exchanging configuration for pre-cooling supplied cooling gas by exchanging heat between said supplied cooling gas and said gas exhaust lumen, and said heating gas supply further comprises a pre-heating heat exchanging configuration, distinct from said pre-cooling heat exchanging configuration, for pre-heating supplied heating gas by exchanging heat between said supplied heating gas and said gas exhaust lumen.
- 95. The system of claim 52, further comprising a direct venting valve enabling venting of gasses from said gas input lumen.
- 96. The system of claim 86, further comprising a direct venting valve enabling venting of gasses from said gas input lumen, said direct venting valve being controllable by commands from said command module of said control unit.
- 97. The system of claim 52, wherein said angioplasty balloon catheter further comprises a moveable thermal sensor operable to report external temperatures at selected positions along a selected length of said catheter, thereby enabling said catheter to report a temperature gradient along a selected segment of a body conduit when said catheter is inserted into said body conduit and said moveable thermal sensor is moved along said catheter.
- 98. The system of claim 97, wherein said moveable sensor is a fiber optic element moveable along said catheter and connectable to a thermographic camera external to said catheter.
- 99. The system of claim 52, wherein said angioplasty balloon catheter further comprises a plurality of thermal sensors operable to report external temperatures along a selected length of said catheter, thereby enabling said catheter to report a temperature gradient along a selected segment of a body conduit when said catheter is inserted into said body conduit.
- 100. The system of claim 99, wherein said thermal sensors are selected from a group comprising a thermocouple sensor, a thermographic camera sensor, and a fiber-optic element connectable to a thermographic camera sensor external to said catheter.
- 101. The system of claim 99, wherein said thermal sensors are spirally configured around and along a section of said catheter.
- 102. The system of claim 99, further including a data communication element for communicating data generated by said thermal sensors to a data receiver outside of said catheter.
- 103. The system of claim 102, wherein said data communication element comprises a wire.
- 104. The system of claim 102, wherein said data communication element comprises a wireless communicator.
- 105. The system of claim 99, wherein at least one of said plurality of thermal sensors comprises a hair-like fiber for enhancing transmission of heat between said at least one sensor and a body tissue adjacent to said sensor.
- 106. The system of claim 99, wherein said plurality of thermal sensors are distributed along an expandable spiral sensing loop having a distal end anchored to a distal portion of said catheter, said sensing loop being spirally wound around a section of shaft of said catheter and being operable to expand away from said shaft, thereby enhancing thermal communication between said sensors distributed along said sensing loop and body tissues adjacent to said catheter.
- 107. The system of claim 106, wherein said spiral sensing loop is designed and constructed to expand away from said shaft of said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing loop is pushed toward said anchored distal end of said sensing loop.
- 108. The system of claim 106, wherein said spiral sensing loop is designed and constructed to contract toward said shaft of said catheter when a proximal end of said sensing loop is pulled away from said anchored distal end of said sensing loop.
- 109. A method of controlling temperature of gasses passing through a Joule-Thomson orifice, comprising:
a) supplying to said Joule-Thomson orifice a gas mixture comprising a pressurized cooling gas and a pressurized heating gas in selected proportion; b) controlling temperature of gasses passing through said Joule-Thomson orifice by:
i) decreasing temperature of gasses passing through said Joule-Thomson orifice by proportionally increasing a ratio of cooling gas to heating gas in said gas mixture; and/or ii) increasing temperature of gasses passing through said Joule-Thomson orifice by proportionally decreasing a ratio of cooling gas to heating gas in said gas mixture,
- 110. The method of claim 109, further comprising pre-mixing said gas mixture, utilizing pressurized heating gas and pressurized cooling gas in a selected proportion.
- 111. The method of claim 109, further comprising utilizing an automated control unit to select a ratio of cooling gas to heating gas in said gas mixture by
d) receiving temperature data from a thermal sensor in a vicinity of said Joule-Thomson orifice; and e) sending control signals to at least one remotely controllable gas flow valve in response to an algorithmic evaluation of said received temperature data, thereby modifying said selected ratio of cooling gas to heating gas in said gas mixture.
- 112. A method of reducing restenosis after angioplasty, comprising inflating an inflatable angioplasty balloon with cooling gas supplied by a high-pressure source of cooling gas passed through a Joule-Thomson orifice, thereby cooling and inflating said angioplasty balloon, thereby cooling arterial tissues adjacent to said balloon during angioplasty, thereby reducing restenosis.
- 113. A method of reducing restenosis after angioplasty, comprising:
a) performing angioplasty by inflating an inflatable angioplasty balloon a gas which neither substantially cools nor substantially heats said during inflation, balloon; and b) cooling said inflated angioplasty balloon by circulating therein a gas cooled by passage through a Joule-Thomson orifice, thereby cooling arterial tissues adjacent to said balloon subsequent to angioplasty, thereby reducing restenosis.
- 114. A method providing for safety testing of an angioplasty balloon catheter having a first inflatable balloon containing a first variable volume, a gas input lumen operable to introduce gas into said first variable volume, a second inflatable balloon hermetically containing said first inflatable balloon and defining a second variable volume interior to said second inflatable balloon and exterior to said first inflatable balloon, and a gas exhaust lumen providing free exit to gas within said second variable volume, comprising
a) introducing a gas into said first variable volume through said gas input lumen; and b) utilizing a gas detector to detect presence of said introduced gas in said gas exhaust lumen, thereby determining whether said introduced gas has leaked, through a failure of said first inflatable balloon, from said first variable volume into said second variable volume.
- 115. The method of claim 114, wherein said introduced gas is helium gas, and said gas detector is a detector of helium gas.
- 116. The method of claim 114, further comprising executing steps (a) and (b) prior to an angioplasty operation, thereby verifying integrity of said first inflatable balloon prior to using said angioplasty balloon catheter in a surgical procedure, thereby contributing to safety of said surgical procedure.
- 117. A method providing for safe use of an angioplasty balloon catheter having a first inflatable balloon having a first variable volume, a gas input lumen operable to introduce gas into said first variable volume, a Joule-Thomson orifice useable to cool gasses introduced into said first inflatable balloon, a second inflatable balloon hermetically containing said first inflatable balloon and defining a second variable volume interior to said second inflatable balloon and exterior to said first inflatable balloon, and a gas exhaust lumen providing free exit to gas within said second variable volume, comprising the steps of
a) utilizing a gas mixture of pressurized cooling gas and a relatively smaller amount of an additional gas to cool said first inflatable balloon during an angioplasty procedure; b) utilizing a gas detector to monitor gas in said gas exhaust lumen to detect a presence of said additional gas in said gas exhaust lumen; and c) ceasing all supply of pressurized gas to said gas supply lumen if presence of said additional gas is detected in said gas exhaust lumen, thereby providing for safe use of said angioplasty balloon catheter by reducing danger of leakage of gas from said catheter into surrounding tissues.
- 118. The method of claim 117, wherein said additional gas is helium, and said gas detector is a detector of helium gas.
- 119. The method of claim 117, further comprising utilizing a vacuum pump to rapidly exhaust all gasses from said angioplasty balloon catheter if a helium leak is detected.
- 120. A method of accurately positioning an angioplasty balloon catheter for an angioplasty procedure, the method comprising:
a) introducing into an artery the angioplasty balloon catheter, the angioplasty balloon catheter having an inflatable balloon operable to perform angioplasty and a plurality of temperature sensors arranged along a selected section of said catheter; b) manipulating said catheter into a selected segment of said artery suspected of having an aflicted portion; c) operating said temperature sensors to determine temperatures at a plurality of sites along said selected segment of said artery; d) comparing said temperature readings to determine a locus, within said section of said artery, having a temperatures high than those measured within other portions of said artery; and e) further manipulating said catheter so as to position said balloon in a vicinity of said determined locus, thereby accurately positioning said angioplasty balloon catheter for said angioplasty procedure.
- 121. A method of treating a stenotic inflammation of an artery, comprising:
a) introducing into an artery an angioplasty balloon catheter having an inflatable balloon operable to perform angioplasty and a plurality of temperature sensors arranged along a selected section of said catheter; b) manipulating said catheter into a selected segment of said artery suspected of having an inflamed portion; c) operating said temperature sensors to determine temperatures at a plurality of sites along said selected segment of said artery; d) comparing said temperature readings to determine a locus, within said section of said artery, having a temperatures high than those measured within other portions of said artery; e) further manipulating said catheter so as to position said balloon in a vicinity of said determined locus; and f) inflating said balloon so as to compress tissues around said balloon at said locus, thereby performing angioplasty; thereby treating said stenotic inflammation of said artery.
Priority Claims (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
306592/2001 |
Oct 2001 |
JP |
|
381927/2001 |
Dec 2001 |
JP |
|
392030/2001 |
Dec 2001 |
JP |
|
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/324,937, filed Sep. 27, 2001, and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/357,653, filed Feb. 20, 2002, the contents thereof are incorporated herein by reference.
Provisional Applications (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60324937 |
Sep 2001 |
US |
|
60357653 |
Feb 2002 |
US |