Inventor · St Albans, GB

Amanda Johns

18Patents
6h-index
15Co-inventors
59Inventor score

Filing activity: Nov 3, 1998 → Jul 8, 2008

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6046210A Tetrahydroisoquinoline derivatives as modulators of dopamine D.sub.3 receptors Chemistry; Metallurgy 16 Expired
US6372757B1 Phenylurea and phenylthio urea derivatives Human Necessities 14 Expired
US7468367B2 Ethylene diamine derivatives and their use as orexin-receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 11 Expired
US6274593A Substituted tetrahydro isoquinolines as modulators of dopamine D3 receptors Chemistry; Metallurgy 11 Expired
US6410529B1 Phenyl urea and phenyl thiourea derivatives as HFGAN72 antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US7423052B2 Piperidine compounds for use as orexin receptor antagoinst Chemistry; Metallurgy 6 Expired
US6596730B1 Phenyl urea and phenyl thiourea derivatives Human Necessities 6 Expired
US7943645B2 Piperidine compounds for use as orexin receptor antagonist Chemistry; Metallurgy 6 Active
US7078565B2 Benzamide derivatives as antagonists of orexin receptors Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US7432270B2 N-aroyl cyclic amines Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US7470710B2 N-aroyl cyclic amine derivatives as orexin receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US6699879B1 Phenyl urea and phenyl thiourea derivatives as orexin receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US7741329B2 N-aroyl cyclic amines Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Active
US7897618B2 N-aroyl cyclic amine derivatives as orexin receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US7928124B2 N-aroyl cyclic amine derivatives as orexin receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US7919507B2 N-aroyl cyclic amines Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US7893090B2 N-aroyl cyclic amine derivatives as orexin receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US7928125B2 N-aroyl cyclic amine derivatives as orexin receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.