View clinical trials related to Rhinitis.
Filter by:This study will hope to show that by relieving the participant's nasal symptoms of seasonal allergies using mometasone furoate nasal spray, the participant will obtain a better quality of night-time sleep, which in turn, causes less daytime sleepiness so that he/she can function productively during the day.
This study was designed to assess safety of an investigational nasal spray in the treatment of perennial allergic rhinitis. Perennial allergic rhinitis is triggered by house dust, mite and mold etc. Typical symptoms are sneezing, nasal congestion and pruritus and rhinorrhea.
The purpose of this study is to investigate, whether levocetirizine 5 mg relieves nasal and ocular symptoms of persistent allergic rhinitis and reduces increased airway resistance and sleep impairment due to this condition.
The study serves to investigate the type and prevalence of non-rhinologic headaches seen through a academic otolaryngology practice.The study encompasses survey questionnaires, review of CT images, and physical examination/nasal endoscopy findings.
This study is aimed at validating key therapeutic targets and biomarkers associated with allergic rhinitis. The therapeutic target expression will be investigated after a 7 day course of corticosteroid treatment followed by allergen challenge.
The Protocol section needs to be updated using the following text "The main goal of the study was to validate the Preference Module of the EARNS-Q and to test the reliability using Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medicines (TSQM), a validated questionnaire for determining satisfaction among different treatment. The EARNS-Q is divided into 2 modules, an Experience Module and a Preference Module. The Experience Module includes 28 items, fourteen attribute rating items followed by fourteen importance weighing questions. The Preference Module includes the same items along with preference questions related to each item as well as a global preference question.
Various chemical modifications of allergens have been attempted to enhance efficacy, improve safety, and foster compliance with IT. These approaches have been unsuccessful - in that the allergenicity and immunogenicity have either decreased, or increased in tandem, with no resultant efficacy: safety benefit ratio. This study utilizes an adjuvant approach in which synthetic immunostimulatory DNA is conjugated to ragweed allergen in an attempt to modulate both the clinical and immunologic allergic response to ragweed exposure in ragweed-allergic patients with seasonal rhinitis.
The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy on nasal congestion and other allergic symptoms and the onset of action of an oral combination of cetirizine and pseudoephedrine in comparison to the single substances under controlled pollen exposure in an Environmental Challenge Chamber (ECC).
This is a Phase 3, randomized, parallel-group, multicenter, double-dummy, double-blind study with a screening period. Subjects will receive one of the following three treatment groups for 15 days: loratadine 10 mg/montelukast 10 mg combination, pseudoephedrine 240 mg, or placebo. The primary objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of the combination of loratadine/montelukast, a once-daily tablet containing 10 mg loratadine and 10 mg montelukast, compared with placebo in subjects with seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR) in relieving the symptom of nasal congestion. The safety profile of combined loratadine/montelukast relative to placebo and pseudoephedrine will also be evaluated.
The aim of the study is to determine the efficacy and safety of ciclesonide nasal spray in children with seasonal allergic rhinitis. Ciclesonide will be administered intranasally at two dose levels once daily. The study consists of a baseline period (1 to 3 weeks) and a treatment period (2 weeks).