Dana R. Mester
17Patents
10h-index
15Co-inventors
65Inventor score
Filing activity: Apr 8, 2005 → Nov 18, 2021
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US7238180B2 | Guided ablation with end-fire fiber | Human Necessities | 111 | Expired |
| US7238179B2 | Apparatus and method for guided ablation treatment | Human Necessities | 80 | Expired |
| US9017323B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 55 | Active |
| US9039702B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 53 | Active |
| US9486276B2 | Devices and methods for fistula formation | Human Necessities | 46 | Active |
| US10045817B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 19 | Active |
| US10603040B1 | Methods for treating hypertension and reducing blood pressure with formation of fistula | Human Necessities | 15 | Active |
| US8740970B2 | System and method for attaching a vessel in a vascular environment | Human Necessities | 15 | Active |
| US10869717B2 | Devices and methods for fistula formation | Human Necessities | 12 | Active |
| US11026743B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 11 | Active |
| US11051880B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 9 | Active |
| US11207070B2 | Methods for treating hypertension and reducing blood pressure with formation of fistula | Human Necessities | 1 | Active |
| US12178501B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US11826093B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US8597345B2 | System and method for attaching a vessel in a vascular environment | General | 0 | Revoked |
| US12369916B2 | Methods for treating hypertension and reducing blood pressure with formation of fistula | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US11986236B2 | Devices and methods for forming a fistula | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.