View clinical trials related to Neuralgia.
Filter by:Dry eye affects millions of people around the world. Some dry eye patients complain of neuropathic eye pain that can affect their quality of life. From August 2016 to June 2017, the QUALVIDON study (NCT03296111), conducted at the Adolphe de Rothschild Foundation Hospital, assessed pain and its impact on quality of life using self-administered questionnaires in a series of dry eye patients. This 2nd study, entitled QUALVIDON2, focuses on the outcome of patients previously included in QUALVIDON.
The aim of this study is to compare the efficacy of radiofrequency of the Gasserian ganglion versus peripheral branches of the trigeminal nerve for the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia.
A First-in-Human, Double-blind, Randomized, Placebo-controlled, Single Ascending Dose Study to Evaluate Safety, Tolerability, Pharmacokinetics/Pharmacodynamics of iN1011-N17 after Oral Administration in Healthy Volunteers.
Peripheral neuropathic pain is a disabling chronic pain condition that is difficult to treat. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to the motor cortex is a treatment method with growing evidence in its ability to alleviate neuropathic pain. This also applies to new deep rTMS coils which permits stimulation of larger cortical areas and with deeper penetration. The aim of this study is to investigate the analgesic efficacy of 5 days of deep rTMS compared to sham stimulation. We will also assess effects of deep rTMS on sleep, psychological fatctors, everyday functioning, and executive functioning.
The main aim of our study was to test the hypothesis that Erector spine plane block (ESP) with sedation will provide the similar employment of fentanyl and propofol during surgery as an infiltrative local anaesthesia with sedation. The primary endpoint was the quantity of fentanyl and propofol during surgery.
In order to address the growing problem of chronic pain management in the UK, a proof of concept/feasibility open label cohort study has been devised to explore the effectiveness of a home-based self-administered non-pharmacological treatment utilising neurofeedback (NFB) training with a headset and tablet-based software application. This study will replicate the intervention from a previous clinical trial conducted in the UK during the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020/21 (NCT04418362) and extend it by examining EEG activity before, during, and after the intervention, alongside outcome measures, including changes in pain intensity and severity, sleep, mood and quality of life. Ten participants will take part in pre-intervention assessments followed by four weeks of EEG baseline readings (5 times per week for 5 minutes), eight weeks of NFB treatment (5 times per week for 40 mins), and 12 weeks of post treatment EEG baselines readings (5 times per week for 5 minutes). Participants will be provided with training and detailed instructions on how to self-administer the NFB treatment using a bespoke headset and tablet-based software application in the comfort of their own homes. Assessments will be conducted at Week 0 (pre-intervention), Week 4 (pre-NFB treatment), Week 12 (post NFB treatment) and at follow up points (Week 16, 20, and 24). It is anticipated this study will provide evidence of the safety, efficacy, reliability and validity of a low-cost non-pharmacological solution to the physical, psychological and social difficulties experienced by individuals with chronic neuropathic pain conducted within the NHS health system.
used ultrasound-guided platelet rich plasma nerve block to treat Intractable Postherpetic Neuralgia.
This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover outpatient study in patients with peripheral neuropathic pain with allodynia or hyperalgesia to cold, heat, brush and/ or pinprick stimulation. Patients will in random order receive ACD440 Gel or placebo treatment twice daily for 7 days, topically applied to the painful area. This is followed by a 2-week washout period, then receive the alternate treatment.
The aim of this study to evaluate the relationship of neuropathic pain with urinary and bowel incontinence, functional disability and quality of life in patients with multiple sclerosis.
Neuropathic pain occurs due to one or several lesions of the central or peripheral nervous system. Spinal cord stimulation is now recommended in France by the Haute Autorité de Santé (HAS) to relieve chronic refractory neuropathic pain (HAS 2014) in the trunk, upper and lower limbs. Spinal cord stimulation can be done either through a standard spinal cord stimulator or with a rechargeable spinal cord stimulator. In this study, the investigators aim at assessing the recharge procedure and their constraints for consecutive patients operated for spinal cord stimulation with a rechargeable stimulator for the treatment of chronic neuropathic pain at the site by the same surgeon between 2019 and 2020.