Tags:
Permalink Reply by Jerome Radcliffe on July 3, 2011 at 12:35pm
Permalink Reply by Gil DePaula on July 3, 2011 at 1:59pm
Permalink Reply by Gil DePaula on August 4, 2011 at 7:52am
Permalink Reply by adam on December 21, 2011 at 3:04pm I've been searching for a group like this for years now and I'm grateful to have found it. I'm an active runner, sys admin, web developer, graphic designer, and of the past year app developer for Windows Phone 7. Since my diagnosis in 7th grade my father and I initially were controlling my diabetes regime from technology derived on a patent he owns with specific application in the oil industry and has the fantastic side effect of benefiting me as a new diabetic at the time.
For several years I averaged a 5.8-6.1 hA1c only only two injections a day (log/NPH) and at the mimimum four finger checks a day. This tech provided me a means of quite literally forecasting and predicting my dose for the upcoming day, as well as with a few test runs of the giant CGMs at the time demonstrating that blood sugar predictions 20 minutes out were possible.
I don't want to get people's hopes up, but I do want to ingrain myself in a culture that I've otherwise been searching for years now. With the recent Defcon announcement made by Radcliffe, I've been eager to construct a similar hack but closing the loop with said patent tech.
This article is a bit old, but if anyone is curious or would like to talk...well, let's do that! That's why I'm here!
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/industry/newsandevents/news_detail.html...
Additionally, I had my genome sequenced earlier this year to discover my chances of contracting diabetes were less than 1%
That's all for now, and I look forward to talking.
adam
Permalink Reply by Gil DePaula on December 21, 2011 at 7:08pm Hi Adam,
If there's already a patent, and you can demonstrate this "closed-loop" algorithm working, I suggest you approach one of the insulin pump makers in the market: MiniMed (MedtronicDiabetes), Animas (Johnson & Johnson), Disetronic (Roche Diabetes), Insulet, etc.
If it's a great algorithm they may be willing to work with you, license it, etc.
Cheers,
Gil
Permalink Reply by adam on December 21, 2011 at 10:22pm I've tried looking for connections via my endocrinologists (namely the reps from those companies that they work with), groups at Purdue Lafayette (where I got my degree), and thus far haven't found any willing to give me the time of day. But truthfully, I just don't know how to go about this process because calling the R&D department of Medtronic doesn't seem like something anyone can just do.
As stated earlier, the demonstration of a hacked pump presents all sorts of possibilities to me that I would be eager to test on myself in an attempt to marry the software with the hardware.
Permalink Reply by Gil DePaula on December 22, 2011 at 5:05pm I see. Speak with Jay and see if he can help you. Cheers.
Permalink Reply by morgdan on January 30, 2013 at 10:19pm Gil, What's the timeline for Pancreum? Any foreseeable release date for the system described on the website? Sure looks good!
My son has Medtronic's medley of devices...I've wondered for some time why these devices haven't been made to communicate with a PDA/mobile device... Do you have any insight into that? Is it just a lag in the industry?
It's curious to me that a big company like Medtronic wouldn't be racing to do the same thing that Pancreum is doing...
Permalink Reply by Gil DePaula on April 13, 2013 at 9:39am Just saw your message. We're still in the engineering phase, and still negotiating with venture capital firms for more funding. So, still a few years away.
There are individual products controlled by a smartphone, but not the same smartphone controlling devices made by different companies. Those companies can't agree on that YET, unfortunately.
Medtronic IS racing to develop a wearable set of devices. I've hear they've spent more than US$ 100 million, but can't get it right like we did it at Insulet.
Cheers, Gil.
Permalink Reply by Molten Fungus on February 6, 2013 at 12:20pm well.. I'm now on the road to hacking the DexCom G4.. I figured someone upstairs gave me the brains to hack at it, as to help my daughter.. so ordered some hardware to figure out the transmission protocol.
There are three goals to why I'm attempting this.
A) While she's in school, I think it would be an awesome feature for the parents to get a text message on the status of their children's glucose numbers. We're now onto our 3rd week, and see things on her CGM that we didn't know (ie stress from certain teachers causing her numbers to swing.. always the same pattern with the same teachers).
B) Repeating signals. Though the range of the G4 is awesome (my daughter is upstairs in her room doing homework, we are downstairs getting supper ready), we can see what's going on. Imagine repeaters (just like wifi), throughout the home or property, while the receiver stays inside.. total freedom)
C) Smartphone implementation. The CGM tech is cool, their windows management software is pretty cool.. the receiver is major "bleh". Either build a device with Android, or port the receiver as a smartphone app.. but then again, there's money to be made and it would be hard to charge hundreds for an app...so not holding my breath..
Manny Hernandez(Co-Founder, Editor, has LADA)
|
Bradford (has type 1) |
Lorraine (mother of type 1) |
Marie B (has type 1) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.
© 2013 A community of people touched by diabetes, run by the Diabetes Hands Foundation.
