Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Axel F. Brisken is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Axel F. Brisken.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2003

System and method for electrode localization using ultrasound

N. Parker Willis; Axel F. Brisken; Jinglin Zeng; Marsha Hurd

The present invention is a device localization system that uses one or more ultrasound reference catheters to establish a fixed three-dimensional coordinate system within a patients heart using principles of triangulation. The coordinate system is represented graphically in three-dimensions on a video monitor and aids the clinician in guiding other medical devices, which are provided with ultrasound transducers, through the body to locations at which they are needed to perform clinical procedures. In one embodiment of a system according to the present invention, the system is used in the heart to help the physician guide mapping catheters for measuring electrical activity, and ablation catheters for ablating selected regions of cardiac tissue, to desired locations within the heart.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 1981

Fabrication of front surface matched ultrasonic transducer array

Axel F. Brisken; Lowell Scott Smith

A slab of piezoelectric ceramic plated on all surfaces is bonded to quarter wavelength impedance matching layers of glass and plastic. The top surface of the ceramic is slotted and parallel cuts orthogonal to the slots are made through the ceramic and into the glass to delineate an array of elements each with a signal electrode between slots and a wrap-around ground electrode. After making ground connections and flying lead connections to the signal electrodes, the matching layers are fully cut through from the front. A covering or wear plate is attached to the front surface and a relatively large mass of acoustic damping material covers the backs of the elements.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 1988

Intracavitary ultrasound and biopsy probe for transvaginal imaging

Wing Law; Wayne Barbour; Axel F. Brisken

An ultrasound probe for positioning in the vaginal cavity includes a phased array of transducer elements at one end thereof oriented at an acute angle with respect to the central axis of the probe whereby the imaging field of view is provided by rotating the probe. A biopsy needle assembly snaps onto slots on the probe with a fork and socket fit. A handle on the probe is offset from the central axis of the probe thereby freeing the space around the entrance to the needle guide and facilitating the manipulation by hand of a needle in the guide.


IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology | 1979

Land mobile communications and position fixing using satellites

Axel F. Brisken; Roy E. Anderson; Richard Louis Frey; James R. Lewis

In a recent series of experiments, the General Electric Corporate Research and Development Center demonstrated effective satellite-aided land mobile communications, analog and digital data relay, and automatic real-time vehicle position fixing. In one sequence of tests a station wagon was equipped with a specially designed antenna, a slightly modified commercial VHF transceiver, and a digital tone-code ranging responder that operated within the communications bandwidth. The General Electric Radio-Optical Observatory near Schenectady, NY, was the major earth terminal. A commercial VHF base station with a satellite antenna deployed first in an office building in Washington, DC, and later in Tucson, AZ, represented a headquarters or a sector office ground station. Communications were relayed by NASAs ATS-3 geosynchronous satellite. Both ATS-1 and ATS-3 were used for position fixing the vehicle. Voice, slow scan television, audio test tones, prerecorded intrusion sensor data, and telephone patches were relayed by the satellite to and from the vehicle under a variety of conditions in greater Washington, DC, and in the southwestern United States. The experiment demonstrated continent-wide communication of a quality comparable to fringe area reception of present local VHF mobile communications but with a notable lack of multipath flutter. Due to the high angle of signalling path from the vehicle to the satellite, solid structures such as buildings, mountains, bridges, or tunnels degraded communications only occasionally. An absolutely clear line-of-sight signalling path was not required. Trees directly in the signal path seldom interrupted communications. Noisy radio environments such as power lines and vehicle ignitions degraded signals received in the vehicle but did not affect vehicle transmissions. Vehicle positions to within one quarter mile were achieved in real time and within several hundred feet after post experiment recalibration and analysis. In another sequence of tests, similar equipments plus biomedical sensors and a medical telemetry unit were installed in an ambulance. NASAs ATS-3 satellite relayed two-way voice communications between a hospital and the ambulance and electrocardiograms from the ambulance to the hospital. Signals were received with excellent quality from various points within the United States, all well beyond the range of conventional line-of-sight communications. The future of operational systems depends not only on technology but on the need to define user requirements, international frequency allocations, and a commitment to support the initial hardware investment. One key technology that would have to be developed is a multibeam spaceborne antenna with low sidelobes. It has yet to be shown that a large space structure will be low enough in cost to attract the large number of subscribers needed to make it an attractive business venture. It appears likely, but not certain, that the cost of a satellite system to serve large, thinly populated areas may be less than a network of terrestrial repeaters that serve the same area. The likelihood is sufficient to justify further studies.


Archive | 2009

Leadless tissue stimulation systems and methods

Mark W. Cowan; Debra S. Echt; Axel F. Brisken


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2001

Therapeutic ultrasonic catheter for delivering a uniform energy dose

Axel F. Brisken; John R. Mckenzie; Robert Zuk; Menahem Nassi; Mark W. Cowan; Paul D. Corl


Archive | 1997

System for electrode localization using ultrasound

N. Parker Willis; Axel F. Brisken; Jinglin Zeng; Marsha Hurd


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 1995

Apparatus and methods for vibratory intraluminal therapy employing magnetostrictive transducers

Axel F. Brisken


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2002

Balloon catheters having ultrasonically driven interface surfaces and methods for their use

Axel F. Brisken; Vartan E. Ghazarossian


Archive | 2002

Ultrasonic enhancement of drug injection

Axel F. Brisken; Robert Zuk; John R. Mckenzie; Jeff Isner; Meno Nassi

Collaboration


Dive into the Axel F. Brisken's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge