Clinical Trials Logo

Corticosteroid clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Corticosteroid.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05230667 Recruiting - Adhesive Capsulitis Clinical Trials

Comparison of the Effect of Combined Glenohumeral Joint and Subdeltoid Bursa Injection With Platelet-rich Plasma (PRP), Corticosteroid, and Normal Saline in Addition to Physical Therapy for Treatment of Frozen Shoulder

Start date: August 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Frozen shoulder, adhesive capsulitis, shoulder, platelet-rich plasma, corticosteroid, injection.

NCT ID: NCT05160506 Recruiting - Pancreatitis Clinical Trials

Corticosteroids to Treat Pancreatitis

CRISP
Start date: March 6, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This research is being done to determine if the administration of a short course of intravenous hydrocortisone, an anti-inflammatory medication, to patients with severe acute pancreatitis will improve their clinical outcomes and decrease the length of hospitalization. We think that because inflammation in the body drives the progression of pancreatitis, giving a short course of intravenous hydrocortisone may mitigate disease progression and improve clinical outcomes in patients with severe acute pancreatitis.

NCT ID: NCT05160441 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Comparing Platelet Rich Plasma and Corticosteroid for Military & Civilian Patients With Glenohumeral Osteoarthritis

PRP
Start date: September 26, 2022
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Shoulder arthroplasty provides successful improvement in pain and function for the treatment of end stage osteoarthritis (OA) of the shoulder in the older patient population (Sanchez 2008, Sampson 2010, Kon 2012, Fitzpatrick 2017). However, the optimal non-operative treatment for shoulder OA in the young active duty and civilian populations has yet to be determined. Although corticosteroid injections (CSI) are a viable option with diagnostic and short-term therapeutic benefit in glenohumeral OA, steroid does little to address the underlying pathology and confers risk of adjacent tendon failure (Kon 2009, Gosens 2011, Monto 2014, Tietze 2014). Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) derived from autologous blood, however, has the potential to enhance soft tissue healing as previously observed in muscles and tendons (Sanchez 2005, Randelli 2008, Hall 2009). PRP contains growth factors purported to safely facilitate local tissue regeneration as corroborated in multiple clinical studies investigating tendinopathy (Virchenko 2006, Kesikburun 2013, Fitzpatrick 2017, Schwitzguebel 2019). PRP is a promising concept to bridge the gap between conventional non-operative measures and surgical arthroscopy or arthroplasty options in a high functioning patient population with refractory disease. However, clinical literature elucidating the effects of intra-articular leukocyte-poor PRP (LP-PRP) injections in large joint degenerative OA has been slower to emerge, lacking substantiated data due to small sample sizes and treatment variability. Therefore, high level evidence-based studies remain critical in ascertaining the therapeutic value and clinical efficacy of LP-PRP in glenohumeral OA in order to establish standard of care protocols and guide systematic implementation.

NCT ID: NCT03365141 Recruiting - Vitiligo Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Intralesional Triamcinolone Injection in the Treatment of Vitiligo

Start date: November 14, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized split-body pilot study was planned to confirm efficacy of intralesiona triamcinolone injection in patients with vitiligo