Dr. TR Hudrlik

CSO

  • Blaine MN UNITED STATES
  • Sensory Seed

Dr. TR Hudrlik has been a Biomedical/Biophysics Research Scientist and Inventor for over 35 years.

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Biography

Dr. TR Hudrlik studied under Dr. Otto H. Schmitt, the Schmitt Trigger, as a graduate student. He developed techniques to control the electrocautery’s ability to produce action coagulation and fulgeration by dynamically adjusting the effective output impedance under dynamic microprocessor control, an 8085. He was Co-Author of an NIH grant as a graduate student titled Automated Impedance Bioassay Measurement Technique for Cystic Fibrosis.

He moved to industry with CPI where he designed the sensing and the rate responsive analog computer and did the clinicals on the RS4 pacemaker the world’s first chronically implanted rate responsive pacemaker. He moved to Dahlberg a large hearing aid company where he endeavored to develop techniques that would alter the hearing curves of response gradually to help recipients train their brain to the prosthetics hearing augmentation.

At Medtronic he managed a large team of software and hardware engineers that developed a computer based office practice system that would collect and coordinate real time telemetered pacemaker data and other aspects of the patient data. He moved to the Pacemaker Division as a Research Scientist later to become a Sr. Research Scientist. In Research he developed an in Vitro technique to calibrate and prove the function of an implantable pressure sensor proximal to the leads distal pacing tip. He then developed a new sensing technique that had a signal to noise ratio over 40db better than that of the present sensing techniques used. This technique was able to reliably detect the evoked response from a successful paced beat. This technique was also shown to be capable of tracking the presence and progress of Congestive Heart Failure as well as proving its ability to monitor and track the impact of ion channel impacting cardio-active drugs. He has produced over a dozen patents demonstrating these new sensing and stimulation techniques.

He went back to the University of Minnesota at 52 to finish an earlier started PhD program to detail the Electromagnetic Field theoretical basis of the new sensing technique called the Field Density Clamp. The title of the thesis is Sensing with Macro Electrodes. The technique details how to break from the traditional high input impedance sense amplifiers by widening the approach to use variable input impedance including shorting the electrodes and measuring the short circuit current that then flows between the two shorted electrodes.

Areas of Expertise

Electrode Electrolyte Interface
Advanced Mathematics
Biochemistry
Cardiac Pacemakers
Cardiac Sensing
Sensing Techniques
Complementary Current Field Effect Transistor (CiFET)
Statistics
Electrical Engineering and Electrochemistry

Education

University of Minnesota

BSEE

Electrical Engineering

1975

University of Minnesota

M.S. Biophysics

Biophysics

1980

University of Minnesota

MSEE

Electrical Engineering

1984

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Affiliations

  • IEEE Senior member since 1986

Patents

Low noise sensor amplifiers and trans-impedance amplifiers using complementary pair of current injection field-effect transistor devices

WO2018098389

2016-11-23

This invention relates to low noise sensor amplifiers and trans-impedance amplifiers using a complementary pair of current injection field effect transistor (iFET) devices (CiFET). CiFET includes a N-type current field-effect transistor (NiFET) and a P-type current field-effect transistor (PiFET), each of the NiFET and PiFET has a source, a drain, a gate, and a diffusion (current injection) terminal (iPort). Each iFET also has a source channel with a width and a length between the source and diffusion terminal, and drain channel with a width and a length between the drain and the diffusion terminal. A trans-impedance of the CiFET device is adjusted by a ratio of width / length of source channel over width / length of drain channel of the iFET and supply power voltage. In one configuration, the gate terminals of the NiFET and PiFET are connected together to form a common gate. In another configuration that common gate is configured as a voltage input for a high input impedance mode. Output voltage swings around a common mode voltage.

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Signal processing circuit for pyro/piezo transducer

US6702755

2004-03-09

An adapter for interfacing a pyro/piezo sensor to a polysomnograph machine comprises a differential input amplifier coupled to receive the raw transducer signals from a PVDF film transducer to provide a requisite gain while rejecting common mode noise. The resulting amplified signal is filtered to separate the pyro signal from the piezo signal and the piezo signal is further applied to half-wave rectifier stages that function to remove baseline noise from the piezo signal before its being applied to a microphone channel of an existing PSG machine.

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Bi-atrial and/or bi-ventricular sequential cardiac pacing systems

US5902324

1999-05-11

A multi-chamber cardiac pacing systems for providing synchronous pacing to at least the two upper heart chambers or the two lower heart chambers or to three heart chambers or to all four heart chambers employing one or more field density clamp (FDC) sense amplifiers for accurately sensing and timing cardiac depolarizations of the right and left heart chambers is disclosed. The synchronous pacing of one of the right and left heart chambers is provided on demand following expiration of programmable pace CDW and sense CDW that are started by both a paced event and a sensed event first occurring in the other of the right and left heart chambers. The delivery of the pacing pulse is inhibited by a sensed event detected in the other of the right and left heart chambers before the expiration of the corresponding CDW. In a four channel atrial and ventricular pacing system, the right and left atrial chambers are sensed and paced as necessary upon at the end of a V-A escape interval and right and left, pace and sense, AV delays are commenced for sensing ventricular depolarizations in the right and left ventricles. The four channel system is programmable to pace and sense in three selected heart chambers. Each FDC sense amplifier allows the timing of a short CDW from a paced event or a sensed event. Preferably, a pacing output stage is coupled with the FDC sense amplifiers to deliver pacing pulses to each heart chamber.

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Selected Articles

Automated Impedance: A Case Study in Microprocessor Programming

Computers in Biology and Medicine 11(3):153, 1981

Tucker, R.D., Hudrlik, T.R., Silvis, S.E., and Ackerman, E.

An automated system for measuring biological impedances is described. A microcomputer system is utilized for experimental control, data acquisition, and data reduction. The developed software uses high-level languages and the ability to mix subroutines written in different languages, which are available for microcomputer systems. The software control of analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog conversions is also discussed. The pitfalls, as well as the advantages, of employing a microcomputer system in a task-dedicated laboratory system are presented.

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The Effect of Serum from Patients with Pancreatic Disease on the Short Circuit Current of Rat Jejunum

IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering ( Volume: BME-26 , Issue: 11 , Nov. 1979

Tucker, R.D., Hudrlik, T.R., Gibbs, G.E., and Christensen, M.

The short circuit current rat jejunum bioassay, first employed in an attempt to discern the cystic fibrosis (CF) serum "factor," was evaluated using sera from patients with pancreatic disease. The data suggest other pancreatic diseases, specifically genetic diabetes and alcoholic pancreatitis, also present with a serum "factor" (or "factors") which reduce the short circuit current of rat jejunum, an effect very similar to that of the CF serum "factor." A large number of sera from presumed normal subjects also exhibited a significant reduction in short circuit current; these (false positives) represent a yet to be defined mechanism, however, they do decrease the likelihood that the observed effect is merely due to pancreatic destruction. Detailed procedure and equipment specifications for the bioassay system are included.

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Electrocautery by Programmable Dynamic Microcomputer Control.

31st ACEMB, Marriot Hotel, Atlanta, Georgia, 21-25 October 1978.

T.R. Hudrlik, O.H. Schmitt, S.E. Silvis and J.A. Vennes.

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