John D. Badzinski
16Patents
14h-index
14Co-inventors
75Inventor score
Filing activity: Mar 13, 1981 → Jan 18, 2006
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US5207752A | Iontophoretic drug delivery system with two-stage delivery profile | Human Necessities | 122 | Expired |
| US5314502A | Iontophoretic delivery device | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 108 | Expired |
| US5697896A | Electrotransport delivery device | Human Necessities | 104 | Expired |
| US4458693A | Monitoring system | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 97 | Expired |
| US7660627B2 | Electrotransport delivery device having improved safety and reduced abuse potential | Human Necessities | 70 | Active |
| US4476873A | Ultrasound scanning system for skeletal imaging | Human Necessities | 55 | Expired |
| US4725263A | Programmable constant current source transdermal drug delivery system | Electricity | 53 | Expired |
| US6035234A | Electrotransport delivery device with voltage boosting circuit | Human Necessities | 35 | Expired |
| US5374242A | Iontophoretic delivery device and power supply therefor | Human Necessities | 33 | Expired |
| US7027859B1 | Electrotransport delivery device having improved safety and reduced abuse potential | Human Necessities | 23 | Expired |
| US4458689A | Ultrasound scanner with mapped data storage | Physics | 23 | Expired |
| US6975902B2 | Reservoir and a series of related reservoirs for use in an electrotransport drug delivery device and devices comprised thereof | Human Necessities | 21 | Expired |
| US6842640B2 | Electrotransport delivery device with voltage boosting circuit | Human Necessities | 16 | Expired |
| US6090095A | Electrotransport delivery device | Human Necessities | 14 | Expired |
| US7708731B2 | Electrotransport delivery device with voltage boosting circuit | Human Necessities | 3 | Active |
| US7054683B2 | Methods of electrotransport drug delivery | Human Necessities | 0 | Expired |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.