Inventor · Sakai, JP

Kazuo Takechi

16Patents
10h-index
33Co-inventors
72Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 12, 1974 → May 22, 2001

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5130244A Stable aqueous thrombin solution Chemistry; Metallurgy 66 Expired
US5138034A Method of fractionating plasma proteins Chemistry; Metallurgy 28 Expired
US6162904A Manufacturing method for intraveneously administrable immune globulin and resultant product Human Necessities 24 Expired
US4740498A Fibronectin preparations Human Necessities 21 Expired
US5616693A Process for seperating alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor from COHN IV.sub.1 +1V.sub.4 paste Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 21 Expired
US4876088A Gamma-globulin injectable solutions containing sorbitol Human Necessities 17 Expired
US5151499A Production method for protein-containing composition Chemistry; Metallurgy 16 Expired
US4104125A Process for producing human lysozyme Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 15 Expired
US4017470A Method for preparing a heat-stable plasma protein solution from paste IV-1 Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 12 Expired
US5132406A Method of producing immunoglobulin preparations for intravenous injection Human Necessities 12 Expired
US5277818A Albumin preparation and process for preparing the same Human Necessities 8 Expired
US4845199A Process for heat treating chemically unmodified gamma-globulin Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Expired
US5589516A Liquid preparation of antithrombin-III and stabilizing method therefor Human Necessities 4 Expired
US5981715A Process for increasing the yield of a protein which has been subjected to viral inactivation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Expired
US6504012B2 Method for preparing dual virally inactivated immune globulin for intravenous administration Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US6441144B1 Method for repairing dual virally inactivated immune globulin for intravenous administration Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired

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