Inventor · Vésenaz, CH

Gabriel Meyer

18Patents
14h-index
2Co-inventors
64Inventor score

Filing activity: Dec 31, 1984 → Nov 29, 1995

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5569191A Device for preparing a medicinal substance solution, suspension or emulsion Human Necessities 185 Expired
US5533994A Storage and transfer bottle designed for storing two components of a medicamental substance Human Necessities 112 Expired
US5358501A Storage bottle containing a constituent of a medicinal solution Human Necessities 100 Expired
US5348548A Two-compartment storage and transfer flask Human Necessities 97 Expired
US4703781A Method for manufacturing a prefilled single-dose syringe and installation for carrying out the method Human Necessities 63 Expired
US5499751A Device for storing a liquid medicinal substance and for administering eye drops Human Necessities 62 Expired
US5487737A Storage and transfer bottle designed for storing a component of a medicamental substance Human Necessities 54 Expired
US5779683A Injector module for a syringe and pre-filled syringe provided therewith Human Necessities 44 Expired
US5291991A Elongate container having two separate compartments, one being an extension of the other Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 39 Expired
US5478324A Prefilled syringe for storing and for transfer of liquid and sterile medicinal substances Human Necessities 31 Expired
US4741737A Prefilled ampoule-syringe Human Necessities 26 Expired
US4941876A Device for conditioning liquids or liquid and solid substances Human Necessities 24 Expired
US5015229A Device for dispensing liquids Human Necessities 20 Expired
US4596561A Prefilled single-dose syringe Human Necessities 17 Expired
US5135513A Connector for liquid transfer device Human Necessities 14 Expired
US4610669A Prefilled ampoule-syringe of unitary dose Human Necessities 12 Expired
US4772271A Prefilled syringe Human Necessities 10 Expired
US4809711A Prefilled ampoule-syringe Human Necessities 3 Expired

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