Inventor · Rancho Santa Margarita, CA, US

Robert John Elicker

16Patents
10h-index
14Co-inventors
69Inventor score

Filing activity: Jan 13, 1993 → Oct 15, 2018

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US7238197B2 Endoprosthesis deployment system for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 134 Expired
US6027517A Fixed focal balloon for interactive angioplasty and stent implantation catheter with focalized balloon Human Necessities 127 Expired
US7125419B2 Noncylindrical stent deployment for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 121 Expired
US5843027A Balloon sheath Human Necessities 111 Expired
US5645560A Fixed focal balloon for interactive angioplasty and stent implantation Human Necessities 111 Expired
US7344556B2 Noncylindrical drug eluting stent for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 61 Expired
US5279280A Endoscope with grooved outer surface Human Necessities 44 Expired
US7686846B2 Bifurcation stent and method of positioning in a body lumen Human Necessities 28 Active
US8603157B2 Endoprosthesis deployment methods for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 13 Active
US7686845B2 Noncylindrical stent deployment system for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 10 Active
US9101501B2 Bifurcation stent and method of positioning in a body lumen Human Necessities 3 Active
US9492594B2 Coating for intraluminal expandable catheter providing contact transfer of drug micro-reservoirs Human Necessities 2 Active
US8236041B2 Noncylindrical stent deployment system for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 1 Active
US8728143B2 Endoprosthesis deployment system for treating vascular bifurcations Human Necessities 1 Expired
US11406742B2 Coating for intraluminal expandable catheter providing contact transfer of drug micro-reservoirs Human Necessities 1 Active
US10098987B2 Coating for intraluminal expandable catheter providing contact transfer of drug micro-reservoirs Human Necessities 0 Active

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