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Corneal Ulcer clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Corneal Ulcer.

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NCT ID: NCT02293876 Completed - Keratitis Clinical Trials

Corneal Lesions in Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Clinical Trial for Proposing Interventions and Evaluating Outcomes of Nursing in the Adult Intensive Care Center Clinical Trial for Proposing Interventions and Evaluating Outcomes of Nursing in the Adult Intensive Care Center

CORNEALPREV
Start date: April 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is find out the better measure to achieve corneal protection in an Intensive Care Unit.

NCT ID: NCT02277054 Completed - Corneal Ulcer Clinical Trials

Safety and Effectiveness of Collagen-phosphorylcholine Bioengineered Cornea in Patients Requiring Lamellar Keratoplasty

Start date: March 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this study the safety and effectiveness of biosynthetic cornea, comprising interpenetrating networks of recombinant human collagen and phosphorylcholine, will be tested in patients with severe corneal pathology (corneal ulcers or corneal opacification from corneal injury, burn or infection) - diseases, where human donor cornea transplantation (the only widely accepted treatment) carries a high risk of rejection.

NCT ID: NCT02168790 Completed - Corneal Ulcers Clinical Trials

Safety Study of a Sutureless Amniotic Membran Transplantation to Treat Ocular Surface Disorders (Expanded Access)

AmnioClip
Start date: February 2011
Phase: Phase 0
Study type: Interventional

The investigators aimed at developing a technique to apply amniotic membrane to a diseased ocular surface without surgical intervention (sutureless amniotic membrane transplantation). This system needs to be concordant with laws and guidelines for the use of medical and pharmaceutical products.

NCT ID: NCT02138019 Completed - Cataract Clinical Trials

The Application of Fibrin Glue (Tissucol Duo Quick) in External Eye Surgeries

Start date: December 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The fibrin sealants are prepared from fibrinogen, thrombin, and sometimes factor XIII that have been purified from human plasma. Tissucol Duo Quick (Baxter, Vienna, Austria) is a kind of fibrin sealants with popular use. It is a 2-component tissue adhesive that resembles natural fibrin formation. This glue has 2 components: fibrinogen (mixed with factor XIII and aprotinin) and thrombin-CaCl2 solution. When equal amounts of the 2 components are mixed, the monomers aggregate by cross-linking, resulting in a fibrin clot. It forms a elastic, whitish substance and provides strong adhesion to the tissue. Therefore, it is a good agent to seal small wounds or to replace the use of suture.

NCT ID: NCT02068430 Completed - Corneal Ulcers Clinical Trials

Safety and Effectiveness of the UV-X System for Corneal Collagen Cross-Linking in Eyes With Refractory Corneal Infection

Start date: November 2008
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This study will evaluate the Safety and Effectiveness of the UV-X System for Corneal Collagen Cross-Linking in Eyes with Corneal Infection. The treatment of UV-X system is to use the eyedrops of the riboflavin, also known as vitamin B2, and ultraviolet A (UVA) light. The eye drops are placed in affected eye and then affected cornea is exposed to UVA. UVA/riboflavin corneal collagen cross-linking was first used to treat patients in 1998 in Dresden, Germany. Data to date obtained mostly by physicians outside the United States has strongly suggested this treatment as an acceptable alternative, and many subjects have had a lasting effect (no progression) 3-5 years after their initial treatment.

NCT ID: NCT01809483 Completed - Clinical trials for Erosion; Cornea, Traumatic

Comparison Between Bandage Contact Lens and Pressure Patching for The Erosion Area and Pain Scale in Corneal Erosion Patients

Start date: September 2012
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This research aims to compare between bandage contact lens and pressure patching in reducing size of erosion area and pain scale in corneal erosion patients as well as its complications.

NCT ID: NCT01794312 Completed - Keratitis Clinical Trials

Efficacy and Safety Assessment of T4020 Versus Vehicule in Patients With Chronic Neurotrophic Keratitis or Corneal Ulcer

Start date: February 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of T4020 versus vehicle.

NCT ID: NCT01765244 Completed - Clinical trials for Severe Trophic Corneal Ulcers Refractory to Conventional Treatment

Allogeneic Tissue Engineering (Nanostructured Artificial Human Cornea) in Patients With Corneal Trophic Ulcers in Advanced Stages, Refractory to Conventional (Ophthalmic) Treatment

Start date: January 17, 2014
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective, phase I-II, randomised, open-label clinical trial that will evaluate the safety and feasibility, as well as clinical efficacy evidence, of a bioengineered anterior corneal substitute in adults with severe trophic corneal ulcers. This model of human anterior allogeneic cornea will provide an alternative approach in cases where human donor keratoplasty is not an option.

NCT ID: NCT01756456 Completed - Keratitis Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Safety and Efficacy of rhNGF in Patients With Stage 2 and 3 Neurotrophic Keratitis.

REPARO
Start date: January 2013
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study is aimed at assessing the safety and the efficacy of two dose regimens of recombinant human nerve growth factor (rhNGF) eye drops solution compared to vehicle for inducing a complete healing of stage 2 (persistent epithelial defect) and 3 (corneal ulcer) neurotrophic keratitis

NCT ID: NCT01242839 Completed - Corneal Ulcer Clinical Trials

Randomized Double Blinded Study Evaluating CACICOL20 Efficiency Versus Placebo Corneal Chronic Ulcers Healing

UNICOL
Start date: April 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

CACICOL20 is a biodegradable nanopolymer engineered to mimic glycosaminoglycans such as heparan sulfates. Applied to the corneal lesion, it replaces damaged heparan sulfates in the matrix scaffold. CACICOL20 binds to matrix proteins such as collagen and cytokines or endogenous growth factors of the cellular microenvironment. CACICOL20 provides a protective function and restores the matrix architecture. This produces a suitable spatial environment for cells to respond properly to the cascade of signals needed for tissue regeneration to resume. The ophthalmic solution, CACICOL20, used for corneal ulcers is very well tolerated both locally and generally, as proved by a pilot study which as been conducted at the "Hôpital des XV-XX" in Paris (France). It reduces the pain significantly and increases corneal ulcer healing (all ulcers treated were resistant to all other usual therapies). Therefore, the accuracy of a Randomized multicentric double blinded study to evaluate the efficacy of CACICOL20 versus placebo for chronic corneal ulcer healing has been shown and will begin mid-may 2010. In this study, CACICOL20 will be applied every 2 or 4 days for 3 months. The aim of the study is a double blinded comparison of complete chronic corneal ulcers healing rate within 3 months in 3 groups of patient double blinded randomized between CACICOL20 instillations distribution and physiological salt solution instillations distribution. The main judgment criteria is healing rate within 3 months defined as corneal ulcer complete closure.