View clinical trials related to Dry Eye.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of 2% rebamipide compared to placebo in clearing of fluorescein staining of the central cornea in subjects with dry eye disease.
Comparison of two contact lens solutions.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of FID 114657 in comparison to Soothe XP in a specified population of dry eye patients.
To evaluate the effects of FID 114657 on tear film break-up time in dry eye patients.
This study will determine the incidence and severity of dry eye in patients undergoing cataract surgery as determined by grade on the International Task Force (ITF) scale.
The aim of this investigation is to determine the thickness of the human preocular tear film using a new method based on laser speckle. This will be a preliminary study to generate "normative" tear film thickness data in normal (i.e., non dry eye) and dry eye subjects in a clinic-based population. In addition, we will examine the short term (i.e., one week) repeatability of the method in a single setting. The patients classified as having dry eye will also have their tear film thickness measured after instillation of an artificial tear. This will potentially reveal valuable data in retention of effect measured non-invasively as in prior studies that employed a fluorescein tracer.
The purpose of this study is to describe the acute comfort and haze profile of FID 114657 in dry eye patients.
The primary objective is to determine if there is a correlation between reductions in corneal staining and improvements in corneal barrier function.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of three different concentrations (0.1%, 1.0%, 5.0%) of SAR 1118 Ophthalmic Solution compared to placebo in the treatment of dry eye.
This study is designed to assess the tolerability and comfort of peri-operative 0.3% hypromellose eye drops in LASIK surgery patients and to assess whether pre-operative 0.3% hypromellose eye drops add to post-operative comfort in LASIK surgery patients compared to control (no pre-operative lubricant).