Alex Zelenchuk
14Patents
13h-index
21Co-inventors
74Inventor score
Filing activity: Dec 15, 2000 → Aug 22, 2011
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US8008088B2 | SMMR (small molecule metabolite reporters) for use as in vivo glucose biosensors | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 824 | Active |
| US8029765B2 | SMMR (small molecule metabolite reporters) for use as in vivo glucose biosensors | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 682 | Active |
| US8466286B2 | SMMR (small molecule metabolite reporters) for use as in vivo glucose biosensors | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 627 | Active |
| US7225005B2 | Optical determination of in vivo properties | Human Necessities | 91 | Expired |
| US7282723B2 | Methods and apparatus for processing spectral data for use in tissue characterization | Physics | 72 | Expired |
| US6933154B2 | Optimal windows for obtaining optical data for characterization of tissue samples | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 40 | Expired |
| US7831298B1 | Mapping physiological functions of tissues in lungs and other organs | Human Necessities | 34 | Active |
| US7103401B2 | Colonic polyp discrimination by tissue fluorescence and fiberoptic probe | Human Necessities | 30 | Expired |
| US6768918B2 | Fluorescent fiberoptic probe for tissue health discrimination and method of use thereof | Human Necessities | 29 | Expired |
| US6902935B2 | Methods of monitoring effects of chemical agents on a sample | Human Necessities | 28 | Expired |
| US7310547B2 | Fluorescent fiberoptic probe for tissue health discrimination | Human Necessities | 23 | Expired |
| US8005527B2 | Method of determining a condition of a tissue | Human Necessities | 23 | Active |
| US7459696B2 | Methods and apparatus for calibrating spectral data | Physics | 19 | Expired |
| US8311607B2 | Fluorescent fiberoptic probe for tissue health discrimination and method of use thereof | Human Necessities | 12 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.