Trademark Overview
On Wednesday, January 28, 2026, a trademark application was filed for EFORTO with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The USPTO has given the EFORTO trademark a serial number of 99618956. The federal status of this trademark filing is NEW APPLICATION - RECORD INITIALIZED NOT ASSIGNED TO EXAMINER as of Wednesday, January 28, 2026. This trademark is owned by Eforto Health Inc. The EFORTO trademark is filed in the Computer & Software Products & Electrical & Scientific Products and Medical Instrument Products categories with the following description:
Motion sensors; Pressure sensors; Instruments for detecting and measuring two-dimensional distribution of force and pressure; Pressure measuring apparatus; Pressure transmitters; Accelerometers; Gyroscopes; Sensors for scientific use to be worn by a human to gather human biometric data and also including an accelerometer and a gyroscope sold as a unit; Electronic data loggers; Electronic data recorders; Wearable activity trackers; Computer hardware and recorded software sold as a unit for use with medical patient monitoring equipment, for receiving, processing, transmitting and displaying data; Downloadable mobile applications for retrieving and displaying health information; Downloadable computer software for controlling and managing patient medical information; Software as a Medical Device (SaMD), downloadable, for diagnosing muscle strength
Dynamometers for diagnostic muscle strength testing; Force and motion testing apparatus for physical rehabilitation; Ergometers for medical testing purposes; Sensors for medical use to be worn by a human to gather human biometric data and also including an accelerometer sold as a unit; Medical products, namely, biofeedback sensors; Wearable monitors used to measure biometric data for medical use; Goniometers for orthopaedic use; Medical diagnostic apparatus for testing muscle strength; Medical instruments for use in conducting effort tests and functional capacity assessments and for guiding or supporting rehabilitation exercises and performance improvement in humans