Gregory Delano Matthews
17Patents
4h-index
13Co-inventors
53Inventor score
Filing activity: Jan 22, 2010 → Oct 11, 2022
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US9463293B2 | Servo ventilation using negative pressure support | Human Necessities | 6 | Active |
| US10286165B2 | Starting pressure for respiratory therapy devices | Human Necessities | 6 | Active |
| US9259544B2 | Pressure support system with machine delivered breaths | Human Necessities | 5 | Active |
| US10137266B2 | Patient-ventilator dyssynchrony detection | Human Necessities | 5 | Active |
| US9056172B2 | Automatic pressure titration | Human Necessities | 3 | Active |
| US9044560B2 | Servo ventilation using pressure drop from baseline | Human Necessities | 2 | Active |
| US11298486B2 | Systems and methods for concurrent airway stabilization and pulmonary stretch receptor activation | Human Necessities | 1 | Active |
| US10342940B2 | Pressure adjustment in a respiratory therapy device | Human Necessities | 1 | Active |
| US12109038B2 | Systems and methods for using breath events in sleep staging | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US9901287B2 | Patient monitoring and exception notification | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US9744322B2 | Automatic pressure titration | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US11458268B2 | Systems and methods for concurrent airway stabilization and pulmonary stretch receptor activation | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US11484256B2 | Systems and methods for sleep staging | Physics | 0 | Active |
| US11638795B2 | System and method for providing enhanced PAP metrics | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US12083274B2 | System and method for increasing adherence to a pressure support therapy | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US11607516B2 | Providing sleep therapy with a pressure therapy system | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
| US12161805B2 | System and method for providing enhanced pap metrics | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.