View clinical trials related to Rhinitis.
Filter by:This is an open-label, non-controlled, non-randomised, prospective safety study in patients with rhinitis or allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, with controlled asthma, and clinically relevant sensitisation to dust mites from the Pyroglyphidae and Glycyphagidae families.
A multi-centre clinical trial done by us(ISRCEN90807007)showed that active acupuncture had significantly greater effect on symptoms of allergic rhinitis than either sham acupuncture or no active treatment. The object of that study was to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture for allergic rhinitis. As an explanatory research, acupuncture was defined as the only intervention for treatment group and sham acupuncture, no active treatment as its control groups. Besides, acupuncture combined moxibustion showed better and longer effect than acupuncture on allergic rhinitis patients in our previous pilot study. According to this result, we are taking a pragmatic randomized controlled trial to further evaluate whether acupuncture combined moxibustion is more effective than conventional treatment.
This is an efficacy and safety study of desloratadine (MK-4117) in Japanese participants with seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR). The primary hypothesis of this study is that the change from Baseline in Total Nasal Symptom Score (TNSS) is improved by desloratadine compared to placebo.
Study to evaluate the two different strengths and dose regimen of GSP 301 to be effective in treatment of seasonal allergic rhinitis.
The investigators performed open-labeled pilot study which evaluates the efficacy and safety of allergen-specific intralymphatic immunotherapy (ILIT) for allergens including Dermatophagoides farinae (Df), Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (Dp), cat, and dog that are sensitized and provoke rhinitis-related symptoms in patients with allergic rhinitis.
Safety and tolerability of ORALAIR in children 5 to 9 years of age during the first 30 days of treatment.
Chronic rhinitis is affecting more than 200 million people worldwide. Its prevalence is estimated to be as high as 30% of the Western population. Rhinitis is defined as symptomatic inflammation of the inner lining of the nose and is characterized by the following symptoms: rhinorrhea, nasal blockage, nasal itching and/or sneezing. The cut-off point for defining rhinitis as chronic rhinitis is considered to be persisting symptoms for over more than twelve weeks Chronic rhinitis can be divided into three major subgroups; based on the knowledge of the major etiological factor: infectious rhinitis, allergic rhinitis and non-allergic, non-infectious rhinitis, in literature also referred to as nonallergic rhinitis. Non-inferiority in efficacy of the two novel treatment regimes i.e. capsaicin nasal spray 0,01mM (2puffs/nostril/day) during 4 weeks and capsaicin nasal spray 0,001mM (2puffs/nostril/day) during 4 weeks compared to the current treatment of capsaicin nasal spray 0,1mM (5/day administered on a single day) with regard to the change from baseline in VAS for major nasal symptom on week 4. (Estimated placebo effect is 25%.)
Korean linguistic adaptation of Rhinitis controlled assessment test (RCAT).
This study is to evaluate the equivalence of generic ciclesonide nasal spray with that of the marketed drug, Omnaris™ nasal spray, in the treatment of seasonal allergic rhinitis, and to evaluate the safety and tolerability of generic ciclesonide nasal spray compared with Omnaris™ nasal spray.
A study of the role of vitamin D in elderly subjects with perennial and/or nonallergic rhinitis. The hypothesis is that vitamin D supplementation will improve rhinitis symptoms and rhinitis related quality of life.