Inventor · Piscataway, NJ, US

Eric J. Semler

16Patents
9h-index
28Co-inventors
68Inventor score

Filing activity: Apr 17, 2006 → Oct 14, 2022

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US8883210B1 Tissue-derived tissuegenic implants, and methods of fabricating and using same Chemistry; Metallurgy 278 Active
US7879103B2 Vertebral disc repair Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 102 Expired
US7837740B2 Two piece cancellous construct for cartilage repair Human Necessities 54 Active
US8834928B1 Tissue-derived tissugenic implants, and methods of fabricating and using same Chemistry; Metallurgy 50 Active
US7959683B2 Packed demineralized cancellous tissue forms for disc nucleus augmentation, restoration, or replacement and methods of implantation Human Necessities 42 Active
US8292968B2 Cancellous constructs, cartilage particles and combinations of cancellous constructs and cartilage particles Human Necessities 41 Active
US9352003B1 Tissue-derived tissuegenic implants, and methods of fabricating and using same Chemistry; Metallurgy 27 Active
US10130736B1 Tissue-derived tissuegenic implants, and methods of fabricating and using same Human Necessities 11 Active
US8435551B2 Cancellous construct with support ring for repair of osteochondral defects Human Necessities 10 Active
US10531957B2 Modified demineralized cortical bone fibers Human Necessities 4 Active
US8906110B2 Two piece cancellous construct for cartilage repair Human Necessities 4 Active
US10973953B1 Methods and compositions for preparing transplant tissue Human Necessities 2 Active
US11596517B2 Modified demineralized cortical bone fibers Human Necessities 1 Active
US12295848B2 Implants including modified demineralized cortical bone fibers and methods of making same Human Necessities 0 Active
US11305035B2 Tissue-derived tissuegenic implants, and methods of fabricating and using same Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US11786637B2 Methods and compositions for preparing transplant tissue Human Necessities 0 Active

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