Inventor · Warsaw, IN, US

Daniel N. Huff

18Patents
3h-index
25Co-inventors
56Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 29, 2002 → Mar 31, 2021

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US9615927B2 Orthopaedic surgical instrument system and method for protecting a femoral stem taper Human Necessities 11 Active
US8252002B2 Modular trial mechanism Human Necessities 8 Active
US8533921B2 Spiral assembly tool Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Active
US6711938B2 Non-destructive joint sealant testing device Physics 3 Expired
US9084685B2 Femoral prosthesis with insertion/extraction feature Human Necessities 3 Active
US8936649B2 Orthopaedic hip prosthesis having femoral stem components with varying A/P taper angles Human Necessities 3 Active
US10646354B2 Kit with femoral prostheses having insertion/extraction features Human Necessities 1 Active
US8082907B2 Air/oil separating PCV apparatus Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US10201428B2 Orthopaedic surgical instrument system and method for protecting a femoral stem taper Human Necessities 1 Active
US11944549B2 3D printed monoblock orthopaedic surgical implant with customized patient-specific augment Human Necessities 0 Active
US7069792B2 Joint sealant adhesion indicator Physics 0 Expired
US9095452B2 Disassembly tool Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US12156801B2 Method, apparatus, and system for balancing a patient's knee joint during an orthopaedic surgical procedure Human Necessities 0 Active
US9867720B2 Disassembly tool Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US12208023B2 Orthopaedic surgical instrument systems and associated methods of use Human Necessities 0 Active
US10022244B2 Method for femoral prosthesis with insertion/extraction feature Human Necessities 0 Active
US10292837B2 Disassembly tool Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US11399963B2 Surgical instrument and method of positioning an acetabular prosthetic component Human Necessities 0 Active

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