View clinical trials related to Bacterial Vaginosis.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to show the efficacy and safety of dequalinium chloride in the treatment of bacterial vaginosis compared to metronidazole.
Most genital infections by human papillomaviruses (HPV) are asymptomatic or benign and clear within a few months or years. There infections are much less studies than chronic infections, even though they represent the main reservoir for the virus. The goal of this project is to decipher the kinetics of the virus and of the host immune response in acute HPV genital infections in your women. This will be performed by following women longitudinally and regularly in order to measure variations in virus load, immune cell count, cytokine concentration and antibody titers. The investigators will also investigate the interaction between these kinetics and host genetics and host vaginal microbiota
THE STUDY HAS BEEN DESIGNED TO COMPARE THE EFFICACY OF TWO DOSES (25 MG AND 100 MG) OF RIFAXIMIN VAGINAL TABLETS VERSUS PLACEBO IN SUBJECTS WITH BACTERIAL VAGINOSIS
GoldenCare is a copper intravaginal device that may be useful for the treatment of symptomatic bacterial Vaginosis (BV). Standard treatment for BV is metronidazole. Although the reported cure rate is as high as 90%, the recurrence rate is 58% after 12 months. The study hypothesis is that GoldenCare will cure BV. This is a proof of concept study to collect preliminary evidence of the safety and efficacy of GoldenCare.
This purpose of this study will be to conduct a double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical trial to determine the association between intravaginal high dose metronidazole (750mg), intravaginal high dose metronidazole combined with an antifungal agent(750mg metronidazole + 200mg miconazole) and low dose (37.5mg) intravaginal metronidazole, with the rate of persistent bacterial vaginosis.
The trial intends to evaluate the efficacy of specially designed probiotics to prevent premature birth and related neonatal morbidity associated to intra-uterine infection. The tested probiotics are efficacious to decrease the prevalence of bacterial vaginosis. The study hypothesis is that the early administration of those probiotics to pregnant women with bacterial vaginosis can prevent premature birth through antibiotic activity and modulation of the immune response to infection.