View clinical trials related to Dry Eye Syndromes.
Filter by:in the recent times, dry eye was found to be correlated sedentary life style, obesity, hypertension. So, changing the sedentary lifestyle is recommended
The purpose of this clinical study is to prove that the test drug (TJO-087) is not clinically inferior to the control drug after 32 weeks of administration to patients with suppressed tear production due to moderate or severe dry eye syndrome.
This is a multi-center, double-masked, randomized, vehicle-controlled study testing PL9643, an opthalmic solution to determine if safe and efficacious for dry eye patients. After a 2-week run-in period, patients will be randomized equally to the PL9643 opthalmic solution or vehicle opthalmic solution administered bilaterally three times a day for 12 weeks. A Data Monitoring Committee will be engaged to review interim data.
Dry Eye Disease (DED) is a multifactorial pathology characterized by inflammation of the lacrimal functional unit that develops in ocular surface pathology, severely affecting patients quality of life. The core of the treatment relies at present in antinflammatory topical therapies, which are still scarce. The investigators hypothesize that osteopathy-based techniques may help these patients by influencing the central involvement regarding parasympathetic innervation of tear and saliva-secreting glands. The aim of this osteopathic treatment protocol is to release the involved structures in the tear-secreting system innervation, such as the sphenopalatine ganglion. In addition, this ganglion innervates the minor salivary glands, therefore it is intended to help patients suffering from xerostomia. The hypothesis then is that a systemic protocol treatment can help balance both parts of the vegetative nervous system (sympathetic and parasympathetic) with the objective of increasing the secretion of tear and saliva in patients with ocular and oral dryness (DED and xerostomia, respectively), thus improving their clinical situation. This osteopathic protocol does not have the potential to cause adverse effects. The main objective is to analyze the efficacy of this protocol application in terms of improving symptoms and signs of ocular and oral dryness, tear film quality and inflammation molecule levels in tears and saliva.
The purpose of this study is assess the efficacy and safety of topical hydrocortisone (Softacort) for treatment of clinical signs and symptoms of dry eye disease when associated with moderate meibomian gland dysfunction.
The purpose of the study is to assess whether PROKERA can sufficiently stabilize the ocular surface prior to cataract surgery and improve post operative outcomes patients with moderate to severe dry disease.
To explore the law of changes in ocular surface inflammation when 0.05% cyclosporine eye drops (II) is used to treat dry eye, 50 cases of mild to moderate dry eyes were included. The expectation is finding out whether cyclosporine has a regulatory effect on conjunctival microvascular parameters and other inflammation indicators after cyclosporine eye drops treat dry eye, and analyze the value of conjunctival microvascular indicators in dry eye immunosuppressive therapy.
To investigate the causal relationship of Sicca dry eye patients with presbyopic refractive error and accommodative spasm.
Evaluate the safety and effectiveness of OC-01 (varenicline) nasal spray among subjects suffering from dry eye following photorefractive keratectomy (PRK)
dry eye disease after corneal collagen cross linking affect ocular function leading to reduced vision, photophobia, glare, halos, and foreign body sensation.