Patents Examined by Michael G. Harley
  • Patent number: 8795733
    Abstract: A polymer-coated cerium oxide based device and system is disclosed for detecting reactive oxygen species and monitoring chronic inflammation. The device and system encapsulate free therapeutic nanoparticle elements not present in a living body in a prosthetic or implantable unit. Embodiment one is a two-chamber structure with a reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging component on one end and at the opposite end is an imaging agent consisting of at least one of a fluorophore capable of fluorescence emission, a chemiluminescent agent, a magnetic relaxation agent and an X-ray contrast agent. Embodiment two is a single chamber device consisting of a multifunctional nanocomposite with a ROS-scavenging nanoparticle constituent (nanoceria) and a multimodal reporting nanoparticle component (i.e. Dex-IO-DiR).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 4, 2012
    Date of Patent: August 5, 2014
    Assignee: University of Central Florida Research Foundation, Inc.
    Inventors: Jesus Manuel Perez, Charalambos Kaittanis, Atul Asati, Santimukul Santra
  • Patent number: 7632488
    Abstract: The present invention relates to a series of crosslinked silicone polymers that by virtue of the nature of the dimol alcohol undecylenic acid ester based crosslinker, have unique solubility and properties. These include improved tolerance for oily materials and improved skin feel. These polymers find use in personal care applications like pigmented products. In the personal care arena, solid products that do not experience syneresis are important. Syneresis is a condition that exists in a solid product that causes a liquid that is incompatible to ooze out, which is cosmetically unacceptable.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 20, 2006
    Date of Patent: December 15, 2009
    Inventor: Anthony John O'Lenick, Jr.