View clinical trials related to Polyneuropathies.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the distal sensory nerves of the feet, namely, the dorsal sural, medial dorsal cutaneous and medial plantar nerves, in patients with impaired glucose tolerance and diabetes mellitus type 2 and compare these parameters to those from healthy participants.
The purpose of the study is to determine the efficacy of etoricoxib on pain patients. The investigators assume that patients with neuropathic pain will have greater pain relief then patients on placebo.
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the clinical effects of the investigational drug, SB-509, in subjects with diabetic neuropathy.
To describe if there are differences in the subjective, objective and electrophysiologic parameters of diabetic polyneuropathies at baseline, four (4) weeks, eight (8) weeks, and twelve (12) weeks after Cilostazol therapy.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety profile of orally administered tapentadol ER dosages of 100 to 250 mg twice daily in patients with chronic, painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN) over long-term exposure of up to 1 year.
Polyneuropathy of different etiologies is often associated with pain and the standard treatment for this type of pain is gabapentinoids or antidepressants. The hypothesis of this study is that the combination of the gabapentinoid pregabalin and the antidepressant imipramine will provide better pain relief than the single compounds alone. This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, 4-way, cross-over trial of pregabalin 300 mg/day, imipramine 75 mg/day and their combination versus placebo. The study will include 60 patients and the treatment outcome will be pain intensity as measured by numeric rating scales.
The purpose of the study is to determine whether or not surgical decompression of the common peroneal, tibial, and deep peroneal nerves in the legs of persons with diabetic peripheral neuropathy is effective treatment.
Painful diabetic neuropathy is the most common cause of neuropathic pain. 0.075% topical capsaicin has been used to treat the pain, but there is no data in lower concentration. This is the efficacy and safety of 0.025% topical capsaicin in treatment of painful diabetic polyneuropathy.
To assess clinical efficacy and safety of long-term orally administered thioctic acid in the treatment of diabetic polyneuropathy.
The purpose of the study is to examine if alpha lipoic acid is an effective treatment for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP).