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RHEOLOGICS INC

Overview
  • Total Patents
    43
About

RHEOLOGICS INC has a total of 43 patent applications. Its first patent ever was published in 1999. It filed its patents most often in United States, WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) and Australia. Its main competitors in its focus markets medical technology, measurement and pharmaceuticals are LIFECARE AS, OPTISCAN BIOMEDICAL CORP and NELLCOR INC.

Patent filings per year

Chart showing RHEOLOGICS INCs patent filings per year from 1900 to 2020

Focus industries

Top inventors

# Name Total Patents
#1 Kensey Kenneth 35
#2 Hogenauer William N 26
#3 Cho Young 24
#4 Kim Sangho 21
#5 Shin Sehyun 9
#6 Nash John E 5
#7 Clupper Harold E 5
#8 Cho Young I 4
#9 Kruss Sergey 3
#10 Stark Peter Randolph Hazard 3

Latest patents

Publication Filing date Title
AU2004200837A1 Dual riser/single capillary viscometer
WO03029785A1 Inline blood viscometer for continually monitoring the circulating blood of a living being
AU2002355110A1 Single capillary tube fluid-column-over-time viscometer
AU2002306461A1 In vivo delivery methods and compositions
WO02068055A1 Method and apparatus for mitigating renal failure using mechanical vibration including ultrasound and / or heat
US2002143244A1 In-vivo blood storage system
US2002088953A1 Dual riser/dual capillary viscometer for newtonian and non-newtonian fluids
WO03058210A1 Dual capillary viscometer for newtonian and non-newtonian fluids
AU2698602A In vivo delivery methods and compositions
US6692437B2 Method for determining the viscosity of an adulterated blood sample over plural shear rates
WO0215771A2 Disposable protective covering for medical instruments
US2002007664A1 Single riser/single capillary viscometer using mass detection or column height detection
US2002014111A1 Single riser/single capillary blood viscometer using mass detection or column height detection
US6497669B1 Non-biohazard blood letting system
US6484566B1 Electrorheological and magnetorheological fluid scanning rheometer
US6450974B1 Method of isolating surface tension and yield stress in viscosity measurements