Christopher Scott Skipper
70Patents
23h-index
56Co-inventors
87Inventor score
Filing activity: Apr 28, 2006 → May 25, 2023
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US8136525B2 | Mask system | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 158 | Active |
| US9032955B2 | Mask system | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 121 | Active |
| USD623288S1 | Patient interface | General | 103 | Expired |
| USD751188S1 | Patient interface | General | 74 | Active |
| USD769440S1 | Patient interface | General | 66 | Active |
| USD637283S1 | Elbow assembly for patient interface | General | 61 | Expired |
| USD810277S1 | Headgear for patient interface | General | 61 | Active |
| USD664250S1 | Mask | General | 60 | Active |
| USD645557S1 | Paired set of prongs for patient interface | General | 59 | Expired |
| USD659237S1 | Patient interface | General | 59 | Expired |
| USD626646S1 | Cushion for patient interface | General | 58 | Expired |
| USD787662S1 | Respiratory mask | General | 58 | Active |
| US9480809B2 | Patient interface | Human Necessities | 57 | Active |
| US9032956B2 | Cushion for mask system | Human Necessities | 57 | Active |
| US8342181B2 | Elbow assembly | Human Necessities | 44 | Active |
| US8402971B2 | Cushion for mask system | Human Necessities | 44 | Active |
| USD597199S1 | Respiratory mask frame | General | 38 | Expired |
| US9737678B2 | Mask system | Human Necessities | 37 | Active |
| US8517024B2 | Elbow assembly | Human Necessities | 36 | Active |
| USD771241S1 | Combined cushion and frame module for patient interface | General | 31 | Active |
| USD669576S1 | Respiratory mask frame | General | 31 | Active |
| USD855794S1 | Elbow module for a patient interface | General | 29 | Active |
| USD635247S1 | Headgear connector for mask | General | 26 | Expired |
| US10675428B2 | Patient interface | Human Necessities | 21 | Active |
| US8915251B2 | Mask system | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 21 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.