View clinical trials related to Eye Abnormalities.
Filter by:Ocular morphogenesis is a complex process starting as early as the 4th week of embryonic life, involving interactions between varioustissues of different origin and conserved genes. Anomalies in ocular development , often of genetic origin, pose diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. Animal models are limited, so human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived optic vesicle containing brain organoids (OVBOs) offer a promising alternative. These pathological OVBOs, created from patients' cells with ocular malformations, allow for the study of underlying molecular mechanisms and testing of therapies.
The aim of the study is to confirm that daily supplementation with a product containing a standardized combination of polyphenol-rich extracts has a protective effect against potential blue-light-induced damage to retinal cells.
Congenital malformations of the eye comprise various developmental defects including microphthalmia, anophthalmia, aniridia, and anterior segment anomalies (such as Peters and Axenfeld-Rieger anomalies). These malformations are frequently associated with extra-ocular features and intellectual disability. However, little is known about visual outcome, frequency and consequences of extra-ocular features in patients. The originality of the project will be to include a spectrum of malformation thought to be a phenotypic continuum (anophthalmia, microphthalmia, aniridia, anterior segment dysgnesis). In addition, we aim to conduct a 10 year follow-up of these children, thus allowing determining ocular and neurological outcomes as any other medical event. We should also be able to determine phenotypic factors that would be associated with good or poor visual and neurologic outcomes
The aim of this study is to evaluate whether there is a significant relation between various arrhythmias during the surgeon's stretching the eye muscles and laryngospasm and emergence agitation in strabismus surgeries
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy safety and tolerability of QR-421a administered via intravitreal injection (IVT) in subjects with Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) due to mutations in exon 13 of the USH2A gene with early to moderate vision loss.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy safety and tolerability of ultevursen administered via intravitreal injection (IVT) in subjects with Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) due to mutations in exon 13 of the USH2A gene.
This project aims to analyse eye movements, their alterations and influence in reading performance in patients with acquired CNS diseases and compare them with people of the same age, without neurological or ocular pathology and with normal reading speed and pattern. The exploration is focused on the oculomotor system in patients with CNS diseases, even without involvement of the primary visual pathway, and reveals more involvement than the one obtained by a simple ophthalmological examination.
PQ-110-005 (BRIGHTEN) is an open-label, dose escalation and double-masked, randomized, controlled study evaluating safety and tolerability of sepofarsen administered via intravitreal (IVT) injection in pediatric subjects (<8 years of age) with LCA10 due to the c.2991+1655A>G mutation over 24 months of treatment.
During recent years, the interest in studying the risks of being born moderate-to-late preterm (MLP), defined as birth between gestational week 32 to 36, has increased. Today the investigators know that morbidity and mortality are significantly higher in these individuals compared to individuals born full-term. However, few studies have focused on the development of the eye in MLP individuals. The purpose of the study is to evaluate eye morphology and visual function in relation to growth, metabolism, blood pressure, neuropsychiatric factors, and quality of life in adolescents born MLP. The results of the examinations will be compared to an age-matched control group. The study will evaluate the structural, functional, and metabolic aspects of the eye with the hypothesis that early eye abnormalities may detect the risk of developing metabolic and cardiovascular diseases.
The International Cohort Study of Children Born to Women Infected with Zika Virus (ZIKV) During Pregnancy study is a prospective, observational, international cohort study of children previously enrolled in the ZIP study or other ZIP 2.0 Protocol Team approved ZIKV-cohort study that will continue the longitudinal follow-up of children born with documented confirmed or presumptive in-utero ZIKV exposure ("ZIKV-exposed" cohort) and children born without documented confirmed or presumptive in-utero ZIKV exposure, matched by site and birth sex ("ZIKV-unexposed" cohort). Follow-up evaluations and assessments will allow for the determination and comparison of long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes among in utero ZIKV-exposed and ZIKV-unexposed children. Each participant will be followed for about 2 years, beginning at approximately 18 months through 42 months of age.