Inventor · Carlsbad, CA, US

Robert M. Ratcliffe

16Patents
8h-index
11Co-inventors
65Inventor score

Filing activity: Oct 15, 1986 → Jun 22, 2000

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5079353A Sialic acid glycosides, antigens, immunoadsorbents, and methods for their preparation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 71 Expired
US5576305A Intercellular adhesion mediators Physics 60 Expired
US5753631A Intercellular adhesion mediators Physics 60 Expired
US5344870A Sialic acid glycosides, antigens, immunoadsorbents, and methods for their preparation Physics 18 Expired
US5296594A Sialic acid glycosides, antigens, immunoadsorbents, and methods for their preparation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 17 Expired
US5620858A Method of removing shiga-like toxins from biological samples Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 12 Expired
US4866041A Synthesis of tumor antigenic determinant Human Necessities 11 Expired
US4794176A Synthesis of tumor antigenic determinant Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US4767845A Synthesis of tumor antigenic determinant Human Necessities 8 Expired
US5679653A Diagnosis and treatment of bacterial dystentery Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Expired
US6574819B1 Methods and devices for removing dew from grass areas such as golf courses Fixed Constructions 4 Expired
US6224891A Compounds and methods for the treatment of bacterial dysentery using antibiotics and toxin binding oligosaccharide compositions Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Expired
US5955449A Diagnosis and treatment of bacterial dysentery Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Expired
US5527901A Sialic acid glycosides, antigens, immunoadsorbents, and methods for their preparation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Expired
US5620902A Sialic acid glycosides, antigens, immunoadsorbents, and methods for their preparation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Expired
US4855126A Method to detect T-antigen delayed hypersensitivity Human Necessities 0 Expired

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