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Alois A. Langer
Born Feb 24 1945
Method and Apparatus for Monitoring Heart Activity, Detecting Abnormalities,
and Cardioverting a Malfunctioning Heart
Patent Number(s) 4,202,340
Inducted 2002
Invention Impact
Alois A. Langer was the engineer on the medical team that invented the
first automatic implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). This device
is implanted in the human body and automatically corrects potentially
fatal irregular heartbeat patterns called arrhythmias. It has revolutionized
the way doctors treat heart patients, has been implanted in a U.S. vice
president, and has saved thousands of lives.
Inventor Bio
Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Langer graduated from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in 1967 with a degree in electrical engineering
and later from Carnegie Mellon University with a Ph.D. in electrical
engineering/biotechnology. His first position was as project engineer
for Medrads ICD development project. He specified and designed
most of the miniaturized electronic circuits in the defibrillator and
designed the mechanical package. These efforts resulted in many additional
patents for ICDs.
Langer remains active in diagnosis and treatment of arrhythmias, having
founded Cardiac Telecom Corporation, a pioneer in providing in-hospital
grade cardiac surveillance over telephones for patients at home through
its Telemetry@Home service. Heartbeat problems are detected and called
in automatically, viewed at a remote receiving center, and then timely
treatment can be initiated.
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