Robert E. Akridge
16Patents
12h-index
12Co-inventors
75Inventor score
Filing activity: May 27, 1999 → Dec 18, 2018
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USD549964S1 | Electric skin brush | General | 84 | Expired |
| US7267673B2 | System for treatment of acne skin condition using a narrow band light source | Human Necessities | 54 | Expired |
| USD523809S1 | Charger for an electric skin brush | General | 50 | Expired |
| US8641702B2 | System for treatment of skin conditions using at least one narrow band light source in a skin brush having an oscillating brushhead | Human Necessities | 43 | Active |
| US7789092B2 | Method for enhancing the shaving process for humans using an oscillating skin brush | Human Necessities | 41 | Active |
| US9107486B2 | Exfoliating brush head for a personal care appliance | Human Necessities | 39 | Active |
| US9554963B2 | System for treatment of skin conditions using at least one narrow band light source in a skin brush having an oscillating brushhead | Human Necessities | 36 | Active |
| US8484788B2 | Brushhead for electric skin brush appliance | Human Necessities | 34 | Active |
| US8469909B2 | Motor for a personal skin care appliance | Electricity | 26 | Active |
| USD715553S1 | Exfoliating brush head assembly | General | 21 | Active |
| USD711656S1 | Exfoliating brush head | General | 21 | Active |
| US6309835A | Methods for quantitating the efficacy of oral care products | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 14 | Expired |
| US8530484B2 | Method and kit for treatment/prevention of hair loss | Human Necessities | 5 | Active |
| US10736413B2 | Systems, devices, and methods of a self-activation use odometer for a skin care brush | Human Necessities | 2 | Active |
| US10441764B2 | Sonic applicator for skin formulations | Human Necessities | 1 | Active |
| US11399624B2 | Skincare device having optimized dual energy modalities, and associated systems and methods | Human Necessities | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.