View clinical trials related to Varicose Ulcer.
Filter by:To follow the effectiveness of Sorbion Dressing in the treatment of highly exuding venous leg ulcers.
The purpose of this study is to compare the clinical outcomes of TruSkin® and an Active Comparator in patients with chronic venous leg ulcers.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate and compare healing characteristics, reduction in the size of the wound and to measure complete healing of the wound following the application of a biologic product dressing instead of the alginate dressing along with standard debridement and compression therapy versus the standard of care treatment for VLUs. The biologic product that will be used in this study is called AmnioExCelâ„¢.
The aim of this study is to - To evaluate the safety and tolerability of Platelet Rich plasma(PRP)/Thrombin mixture in treating chronic venous ulcers - To evaluate efficacy of PRP/Thrombin mixture in treating chronic venous ulcers
The primary objective of this study is to demonstrate the non-inferiority of the 2-layer compression system Kit Biflex® with regard of the 4-layer compression system PROFORE® in the treatment of venous leg ulcers in terms of complete healing at 16 weeks.
The aim of this clinical trial is to investigate the efficacy (by monitoring the wound size reduction) and safety (by monitoring occurring adverse events) of the investigational medicinal product APZ2 after one single application on chronic venous leg ulcer wounds.
The purpose of the study is to test non-inferiority of chronic Venous Leg Ulcer (VLU) area reduction at 16 weeks with a dual action pneumatic compression device compared to multi-layer bandaging.
A prospective, multicenter, randomised controlled phase II study in which patients with therapy resistant (arterio-) venous leg/foot ulcers are treated with Tiscover® (test group) or with AS210 (control group) to determine the safety and relative efficacy of both products.
This efficacy study evaluates the safety and effectiveness of aspirin for venous leg ulcer healing. The study also examines whether patients can be recruited to a larger study. Patients with chronic venous leg ulceration presenting and undergoing care in leg ulcer community clinics or hospital out-patient clinics, or registered with a clinic but are receiving care at home will be recruited. All patients will receive standard compression bandaging. Half of the participants will be randomised to receive aspirin, while the other half will receive a placebo.
This investigation plans to initiate the healing of chronic wounds by providing a concentrated platelet and growth factor therapy directly to the wound site by topical delivery. This therapy will be derived from autologous platelet rich plasma (PRP), an emerging surgical and wound care treatment. This investigation aims to demonstrate that patients with chronic, non-healing wounds treated with autologous PRP and standard medical care have a reduction in wound volume and improved healing rate that results in patient-centered clinically significant health outcomes as compared to patients treated with standard medical care only.