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Vulvodynia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05324280 Recruiting - Vulvodynia Clinical Trials

Acupuncture in a Multidisciplinary Approach for Vulvodynia and Chronic Pelvic Pain

AMALIA
Start date: June 23, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Vulvodynia and chronic pelvic pain (CPP) are common and challenging gynecologic pain syndromes. A multidisciplinary approach is recommended. Study aim: To study the effectiveness of acupuncture as part of a multimodal treatment for women with vulvodynia and CPP. Design: Randomised controlled clinical study Study Population: Recruitment from a University outpatient clinic Study groups: Participants will be randomised (1:1) - Acupuncture group - Waiting list control group Sample size: 68 patients Study outcome - Subjective Pain Perception (VAS) - Health-related quality of life (questionnaires)

NCT ID: NCT04711369 Recruiting - Vulvodynia Clinical Trials

Lasertherapy for Vulvodynia

Lydia
Start date: January 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to assess the efficacy, acceptance and safety profile of vulvovaginal laser therapy in women with vulvodynia.

NCT ID: NCT04613713 Recruiting - Vulvodynia Clinical Trials

Somatocognitive Therapy in Treatment of Provoked (Localized) Vestibulodynia - Randomized Clinical Trial (ProLoVe Study)

ProLoVe
Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a two-arm randomized clinical trial assessing effectiveness of somatocognitive therapy versus treatment as usual for provoked vestibulodynia (PVD). PVD is a common, but under-treated persistent pain condition, mostly affecting young women in their late teens and early 20s. It is the most frequent cause of pain during sexual intercourse affecting around 10% of women in the general population. There are no generally accepted evidence-based guidelines for the medical management of PVD. The most commonly used treatments are topical (85%), physiotherapy (52%), and oral medications (45%). High quality randomized clinical trials testing effectiveness of various therapy approaches are urgently needed. Somatocognitive therapy SCT is a multi-modal physiotherapy approach developed for alleviating musculoskeletal persistent pain conditions. SCT has been previously evaluated in the treatment of women with chronic pelvic pain. In the current study, 128 women with PVD will be randomized into SCT and treatment as usual (TAU) group. Participants will be assessed at baseline, after 6 months and after 12 months. The main outcome will be changes in female sexual function index scored at 12 months follow up. Secondary outcomes include pain intensity as assessed by a tampon test as well as a number of questionnaires recording different aspects of emotional and cognitive functioning. In addition cost-effectiveness analysis of SCT versus TAU will be performed. Participants in the SCT group will receive up to 15 therapy sessions and will additionally be offered one booster session at 6 months after treatment ending. TAU group will follow treatment options of their own choice based on recommendations from the Vulva clinic at Oslo University Hospital, a center that is specialized in treating women with vulvar pain conditions.

NCT ID: NCT04016467 Recruiting - Vulvodynia Clinical Trials

Effect of Spinal Manipulation on Vulvar Pain

SpManipPP
Start date: May 10, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the study is to determine the effect of thoracic spine manipulation on vestibule pain as determined by sensory testing (q-tip and pressure algometry) in a group of women with provoked vestibulodynia (PVD). The objective is to compare the immediate effect of manipulation and sham manipulation on the results of sensory testing of the external vulva, or vestibule.

NCT ID: NCT03640624 Recruiting - Chronic Pain Clinical Trials

Multidisciplinary Treatment of Chronic Vulvar Pain

Start date: September 18, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Vulvodynia (i.e. chronic vulvar pain without identifiable cause) is a heterogeneous clinical entity with a complex multifactorial causation. It is long lasting and difficult to treat, and the general consensus of current guidelines states that patients with vulvodynia benefit from a compound multidisciplinary intervention targeting mucosal hypersensitivity, pelvic muscle floor dysfunction and general pain management. However, there is little empiric evidence to support this recommendation. This will be a randomized controlled trial comparing multidisciplinary treatment with standard care for women with vulvodynia.

NCT ID: NCT03481621 Recruiting - Vulvodynia Clinical Trials

Effect of Two Acupuncture Protocols on Vulvodynia

Acu/Vul-pain
Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Vulvodynia is a common condition in women (16%); however, at this time there is no known effective non-pharmacological therapy reported. Acupuncture is one complementary and alternative medicine therapy used by many patients with vulvodynia; some case reports show that acupuncture may be an effective intervention. In recent years, there were some studies registered took at like at actual trials of acupuncture on vulvodynia, but either they did not reach the trial aims, some studies did not get enough patients or the trial designs mimic drug studies and did not reflect acupuncture real characteristics. This study evaluates acupuncture for the treatment of vulvodynia; specifically, if it reduces vulvar pain, pain duration and pain with intercourse. It also examines how long the effect of acupuncture lasts in women with vulvodynia. One third of the women will receive acupuncture focused on pudendal nerve distribution area; another one third of the women will receive acupuncture focused on traditional meridian points; the other one third of women will use standard care (without acupuncture). Women who get a reduction in pain (included in subjective and objective scores) will have their pain monitored once a week for up to 6 weeks to see if the acupuncture effect lasts.

NCT ID: NCT02871661 Recruiting - Vulvodynia Clinical Trials

Physical Therapy as Adjuvant Treatment of Vulvodynia: a Randomized Controled Trial

Start date: July 2016
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

INTRODUCTION: Vulvodynia (chronic vulvar pain in the absence of clinical findings) has a negative impact over quality of life in women with this diagnose. The existing treatments, however, are manifold but insufficient. This study aims to verify the effectiveness of kinesiotherapy and electrotherapy as adjuvant methods in the treatment of vulvodynia. METHODS: A single-blind randomized controlled trial will examine 58 women, divided into three treatment arms: use of tricyclic antidepressant alone (hydrochloride Amitriptyline), amitriptyline hydrochloride associated with pelvic floor muscle exercises and amitriptyline hydrochloride associated with electrotherapy (interferential current). Exclusion criteria are: presence of infections or genital cancers, chronic degenerative diseases; younger than 18 years, neurological disease that jeopardizes the contraction of the muscles of the pelvic floor, taking antidepressant drugs that have interaction with amitriptyline hydrochloride and being pacemakers use. The parameters analyzed before and after treatment will be: muscle volume of the anus elevator and perfusion of the pudendal artery obtained with 3D ultrasound, subjective pain in vaginal intercourse (visual analog scale), monthly frequency of vaginal intercourse, pain referred within vulvar touch on physical examination (swab test from zero to 10) and female sexual function (Female Sexual Function questionnaire - FSFI). There will be a follow up of subjective pain in vaginal intercourse and monthly frequency of vaginal intercourse obtained by telephone contact with the voluntary on one, six and twelve months after the end of interventions. The data will be analyzed using Chi-square test of Pearson, Fisher exact and Mann-Whitney. The beginning and end of treatment will be compared using the Wilcoxon test (related samples) and McNemar (effect of the intervention), considering statistical significance level of 5%. The software used is the statistical analysis software (SAS) - Release 9.1, SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina, USA, 2002-2003 and Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) -Release 17.0.

NCT ID: NCT01829204 Recruiting - Bacterial Vaginosis Clinical Trials

Prospective Data Bank Creation to Study Vaginal Conditions

CRIPB-13-002
Start date: April 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The purpose of this study is to identify and elucidate the pattern and perhaps role of atypical proteins, cytokines and vaginal microbial flora in the pathogenic mechanisms involved in the development of vulvodynia, recurrent fungal and bacterial vaginosis and preterm labor.