Analyte monitoring system having an alert
US-9178752-B2 · Nov 3, 2015 · US
US11730429B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11730429-B2 |
| Application number | US-202217580593-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jan 20, 2022 |
| Priority date | Aug 31, 2009 |
| Publication date | Aug 22, 2023 |
| Grant date | Aug 22, 2023 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
Embodiments described herein relate to an analyte monitoring device having a user interface with a display and a plurality of actuators. The display is configured to render a plurality of display screens, including a home screen and an alert screen. The home screen is divided into a plurality of simultaneously displayed panels, with a first panel displays a rate of change of continuously monitored analyte levels in interstitial fluid, a second panel simultaneously displays a current analyte level and an analyte trend indicator, and a third panel displays status information of a plurality of components of the device. When an alarm condition is detected, the display renders the alert screen in place of the home screen, the alert screen displaying information corresponding to the detected alarm condition. Furthermore, the actuators are configured to affect further output of the analyte monitoring device corresponding to the detected condition.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A glucose monitoring system comprising: a glucose sensor configured to be positioned at least in part in contact with interstitial fluid in a body of a user; a transmitter unit configured to be coupled to the glucose sensor and process data indicative of a plurality of monitored glucose levels from the glucose sensor; and a receiver unit comprising a processor and a user interface having a display, wherein the receiver unit is configured to receive the processed data from the transmitter unit, wherein the display is configured to render a plurality of display screens, including at least a home screen, a first alert screen, and a second alert screen, wherein the home screen is divided into a plurality of simultaneously displayed panels, wherein a first panel of the plurality of panels is configured to display the plurality of monitored glucose levels, wherein a second panel of the plurality of panels is configured to simultaneously display a current glucose level and a glucose trend indicator, and wherein a third panel of the plurality of panels is configured to display status information of a plurality of components of the glucose monitoring system; wherein the display is further configured to: render the first alert screen on the display when a first alarm condition is detected, wherein the first alarm condition corresponds to a projected low glucose condition, the first alert screen having information corresponding to the first alarm condition, and to affect a further output of the glucose monitoring system corresponding to the first alarm condition in response to user actuation of a portion of the display; and wherein the processor is configured to: cause the display to render the plurality of display screens; determine whether the first alarm condition has been resolved; and display the second alert screen in place of the displayed first alert screen when a second alarm condition is detected prior to the first alarm condition being resolved, wherein the second alarm condition corresponds to a low glucose condition, and wherein the second alarm condition has a higher priority than the first alarm condition. 2. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein the processor is further configured to dynamically update one or more of the panels of the display such that newly received data is displayed when received by the glucose monitoring system. 3. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein the status information of a plurality of components of the glucose monitoring system includes at least one of: audio/vibratory settings, a calibration status, a wireless connection status, a battery status, a sensor life status, and an alarm notification. 4. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein the first alarm condition corresponds to a medium urgency alert corresponding to the projected low glucose condition, and wherein the second alarm condition corresponds to a high urgency alert corresponding to the low glucose condition. 5. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein the display is further configured to render a timeline graph having a plurality of indicators disposed thereon, wherein each of the plurality of indicators represent an event, and wherein each event is selected from a group of events consisting of a discrete blood glucose measurement, an insulin dose, an exercise period, a meal, a state of health, and a custom event. 6. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein if the first alarm condition corresponds to a projected glucose level that is below or above a predetermined threshold, the further output corresponding to the detected condition comprises a graph that shows glucose data and corresponding events that may have contributed to the alarm condition, and wherein each event is selected from a group of events consisting of a discrete blood glucose measurement, an insulin dose, an exercise period, a meal, a state of health, and a custom event. 7. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein at least one portion of the display is programmable by a user to act as a shortcut to a particular display screen. 8. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , further comprising an accelerometer configured to generate movement data indicative of a detected movement of the glucose monitoring system, wherein the processor is configured to modify an output of at least one of the plurality of display screens based on the detected movement of the glucose monitoring system. 9. The glucose monitoring system of claim 1 , wherein the processor is configured such that at least one of the plurality of panels is expandable when at least one portion of the display is actuated by a user. 10. A method, comprising: receiving glucose level information data from a transmitter, the transmitter operably connected to a glucose sensor in fluid contact with interstitial fluid; displaying a graphical representation of a plurality of glucose levels monitored over a predetermined amount of time in a first panel of a display screen of a display device; simultaneously displaying a numerical representation of a current glucose level and an iconic trend indicator in a second panel of the display screen of the display device, displaying a plurality of iconic status representations of a plurality of components including the transmitter and the display device, wherein the plurality of iconic status representations are simultaneously displayed on a third panel of the display screen of the display device; displaying a first alert screen in response to a detected first alarm condition, wherein the first alert screen is displayed on the display screen, wherein the first alarm condition corresponds to a projected low glucose condition, the first alert screen having information corresponding to the first alarm condition; controlling further output of the display device based on user actuation of a portion of the display screen of the display device; determine whether the first alarm condition has been resolved; and displaying a second alert screen in place of the displayed first alert screen when a second alarm condition is detected prior to the detected first alarm condition being resolved, wherein the second alarm condition corresponds to a low glucose condition, and wherein the second alarm condition has a higher priority than the first alarm condition. 11. The method of claim 10 , further comprising: displaying at least one event icon on the display screen, the at least one event icon corresponding to a user event, wherein the user event corresponds to the detected condition, and wherein the user event is selected from a group of events consisting of a discrete blood glucose measurement, an insulin dose, an exercise period, a meal, a state of health, and a custom event. 12. The method of claim 10 , further comprising: displaying on the graphical representation a first user defined glucose level threshold indicator and a second user defined glucose level threshold indicator; and displaying a glucose level alert when the current glucose level passes at least one of the first glucose level threshold indicator or the second glucose level threshold indicator. 13. The method of claim 10 , further comprising enabling programming of at least one portion of the display device to act as a shortcut to the display screen, the first alert screen, or the second alert screen. 14. The method of claim 10 , further comprising: comparing the current glucose level with a plurality of subsequent glucose levels; and updating the current glucose level and the iconic trend indicator only when a difference between the
Display arrangements, e.g. multiple display units · CPC title
Devices for taking samples of blood (hypodermic syringes A61M5/00); Measuring characteristics of blood in vivo, e.g. gas concentration within the blood, pH-value of blood (measuring of blood pressure A61B5/02; non-radiation detecting or locating of foreign bodies in blood A61B5/06) · CPC title
Measuring characteristics of blood in vivo, e.g. gas concentration or pH-value {; Measuring characteristics of body fluids or tissues, e.g. interstitial fluid or cerebral tissue} (non-radiation detecting or locating of foreign bodies in blood A61B5/06) · CPC title
for measuring glucose, e.g. by tissue impedance measurement · CPC title
Determining trends in physiological measurement data; Predicting development of a medical condition based on physiological measurements, e.g. determining a risk factor · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.