Licensable university IP
Apparatus with a repeating trapezoidal mechanism that enables an alternating pressure support surface for preventing pressure injury
Apparatus with a repeating trapezoidal mechanism that enables an alternating pressure support surface for preventing pressure injury is marketed for licensing by University of California. It is documented in US patent US 12,605,295. The current assignee of record is K Medical LLC. Google Patents reports its legal status as “Active” (an automated indicator, not a legal determination). Its expected expiration is 2040-10-22.
The patent's current assignee of record differs from the marketing institution (University of California). Confirm licensing rights with the assignee of record before relying on this listing.
Patent picture
| Field | Value | Reliability | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| US patent | US 12,605,295 | High | Google Patents |
| Patent title | Apparatus with a repeating trapezoidal mechanism that enables an alternating pressure support surface for preventing pressure injury | High | Google Patents |
| Current assignee | K Medical LLC | Good | Google Patents |
| Original assignee | K Medical LLC | Good | Google Patents |
| Legal status | Active | Moderate | Google Patents |
| Filing date | 2024-05-31 | High | Google Patents |
| Priority date | 2019-08-02 | High | Google Patents |
| Publication date | 2026-04-21 | High | Google Patents |
| Expected expiration | 2040-10-22 | Moderate | Google Patents |
- High 90% and up
- Good 80 to 89%
- Moderate 70 to 79%
Legal status is Google Patents' automated indicator, not a legal determination.
Joined to US 12,605,295 by its printed patent number (a deterministic match), then enriched from public Google Patents data. Fields are shown only where resolved against a public source; unresolved fields are omitted, never guessed.
Grouped under Medical Devices & Diagnostics · Mechanical & Industrial, derived from its patent classification (CPC A47C, A61G; Google Patents).
Original listing
This technology is marketed for licensing by University of California. View the original listing.