HYDRA-MORPH SURFACE Trademark
HYDRA-MORPH SURFACE is a USPTO trademark filed by Peters Surgical, Société Par Actions. Status: Pending.
Trademark Facts
| Mark | HYDRA-MORPH SURFACE |
|---|---|
| Serial Number | 79448276 |
| Status | Pending |
| Filing Date | 2026-02-20 |
| Mark Type | Unknown |
| Nice Classes | 005 (Pharmaceuticals), 010 (Medical Devices) |
| Owner | Peters Surgical, Société Par Actions |
| Prosecution Events | 3 |
| Latest Event | MAFR on 2026-04-23 |
Goods & Services
Class 005: Medical and pharmaceutical preparations for use in bone repair and bone regeneration; bone void filling compositions for medical use; bioactive and osteoconductive materials for medical use; resorbable materials for filling bone defects for medical use; calcium phosphate-based preparations for medical use; freeze-dried medical preparations for reconstructive and orthopaedic purposes; medical preparations supplied in powder form for reconstitution prior to clinical application; preparations for promoting bone remodelling and bone healing; medical preparations for use in orthopaedic, trauma, dental, maxillofacial and reconstructive procedures.; Class 010: Medical and surgical devices and implants; bone void fillers; resorbable bone substitutes; osteoconductive and bioactive bone substitute materials; medical devices for promoting bone regeneration and bone remodelling; implantable biomaterials for the treatment of bone defects; microporous and macroporous ceramic medical implants; biphasic calcium phosphate ceramic implants; implantable calcium phosphate-based bone substitutes; resorbable implantable scaffolds for bone tissue regeneration; freeze-dried medical devices for implantation; medical devices supplied in powder form for reconstitution prior to implantation; medical devices for orthopaedic, trauma, spinal, maxillofacial, dental and reconstructive surgery; surgical implants incorporating polymer binders of pharmaceutical grade; mouldable and injectable bone substitute materials for clinical use; medical devices progressively resorbed and replaced by new bone tissue during healing.