View clinical trials related to Myopia.
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The objective of this clinical trial was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of defocusing lenses for delaying myopia progression in children and adolescents. A total of 156 subjects meeting the requirements of the study protocol were included. During the study, subjects were required to wear the test product (defocus lens A or defocus lens B) or the control product (aspheric lens) for 12 months, and regular follow-up was required during the wearing process, including various ophthalmological examinations and subjective feelings about wearing the lens. During the study period, the product status, ocular conditions, adverse events and serious adverse events were continuously observed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the test product in clinical use.
The purpose of this Post-Market Clinical Follow-Up (PMCF) study is to continuously assess the visual performance and safety of TOTAL30 Sphere and TOTAL30 for Astigmatism contact lenses in a real-world setting across a broad variety of patients through routine clinical practices.
To confirm the efficacy of DIMS lenses in controlling myopia progression, we planned a prospective, single-centre, randomised, double-blind, controlled, non-inferiority clinical study.
The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of employing bandage contact lenses with a base curve of 8.4 mm versus 8.8 mm on visual recovery following Trans-PRK in patients characterized by steep corneas and high myopia.
Lens wettability and subjective comfort of Euclid orthokeratology lenses with and without an enhanced coating will be compared in 50 children. Axial elongation will be monitored in pediatric patients who qualify and consent.
The "first fit" success rate of the current Euclid orthokeratology "MAX" lens design will be compared to that of the new Euclid orthokeratology MAX "Phoenix" lens design in 30 children.
Phase III clinical study to evaluate the efficacy of Alleance® (atropine sulfate 0.01%) ophthalmic solution through the incidence of unexpected adverse events, changes in Best Corrected Visual Acuity (BCVA), changes in intraocular pressure, changes in the amplitude of accommodation, compared to placebo, as a treatment to delay the progression of myopia and axial ocular elongation in children.
This open-label study is of current Acuvue® Oasys® wearers (2 - week replacement, reusable lenses) who are satisfied with their current lenses. Subjects will be refit into one week reusable contact lenses and will wear lenses for approximately 2 weeks. Subjects will return for vision and lens fit assessments and will complete surveys about their wear experience.
The goal of this observational study is to test whether surgeries for lenses designed to be implanted in the eye to correct refractive error can be done without the need for using viscoelastic substances that are used routinely nowadays to make it easier to introduce them inside the human eye and protect the inside of the eye during the operation. The main question it aims to answer is that is it safe to do the surgery without using them? to answer this question researchers will access recorded data of patients that underwent refractive surgeries in a private clinic since 2017 and compare them as two groups: those who underwent the traditional procedures and those who had it without the use of dispersive viscoelastics in regard to their vision before and after surgery, their ocular pressure and biomicroscopic analysis of the inside of their corneas before and after surgery.