View clinical trials related to Neuritis.
Filter by:Optic Neuritis (ON) is a condition that occurs in approximately 50% of individuals with relapse remitting MS, and is the presenting event in 15-20% of patients who go on to develop MS. These ON events present with a decline in vision over several days with painful eye movements. The purpose of this study is to collect pilot data on the effect of Fampridine-SR on the recovery of visual function after demyelinating optic neuritis.Our team evaluated a person with ON who had incomplete recovery which was quite bothersome to her. After a one-month treatment course Fampridine SR,her visual functioning improved. Based on this case, we present a unique opportunity to evaluate the potential benefit of Fampridine-SR as a potential treatment for persons who do not fully recover from acute ON.
This is both a prospective and retrospective study of patients with a known diagnosis of optic neuritis (ON) only, multiple sclerosis (MS) with ON, or neuromyelitis spectrum disorder (NMOSD) with ON. There will be no requirement for blinding (patient or assessor) and data collected with the Reflex app will be compared against other data that track optic nerve functional status, such as optical coherence tomography (OCT), visual fields (VF), low-contrast sensitivity, MRI orbits/brain and visual evoked potentials (VEP). Patients who have any diagnosis of ON, with or without a diagnosis of MS or NMOSD and who have had testing using other modalities such as VEPs, VF, low-contrast sensitivity studies, OCT, and MRI of brain or orbits will be included as retrospective subjects in the study. In this cohort, RAPD assessments will be completed and compared to against the data that has accrued as noted.
In light of experimental models showing that neuronal electrical activity is crucial for the remyelination process, we hypothesize that maintenance of electrical axonal activity in the early stages of optic neuritis may promote myelin repair, limiting thereby axonal degeneration. In humans, electrical stimulation of the optic nerve has been tested mainly in ischemic neuropathy and retinitis pigmentosa, which are both associated with severe axonal/retinal pathology and poor visual prognosis. In contrast, the inflammation of the optic nerve in optic neuritis is generally transient, with less severe axonal damage at the acute phase, which would allow for better efficacy of electrical stimulation as a strategy to promote remyelination and neuroprotection.In light of experimental models showing that neuronal electrical activity is crucial for the remyelination process, we hypothesize that maintenance of electrical axonal activity in the early stages of optic neuritis may promote myelin repair, limiting thereby axonal degeneration. In humans, electrical stimulation of the optic nerve has been tested mainly in ischemic neuropathy and retinitis pigmentosa, which are both associated with severe axonal/retinal pathology and poor visual prognosis. In contrast, the inflammation of the optic nerve in optic neuritis is generally transient, with less severe axonal damage at the acute phase, which would allow for better efficacy of electrical stimulation as a strategy to promote remyelination and neuroprotection.
The visual prognosis of optic neuritis not related to multiple sclerosis is unknown, both in terms of functional recovery and evolution. This prospective cohort study aim to assess the ophthalmological evolution of patients presenting an episode of optic neuritis (NO) not related to a multiple sclerosis or to a clinically isolated syndrome.
Optic neuritis (ON) is an acute inflammatory, demyelinating attack of the optic nerve that triggers neurodegeneration in the entire visual pathway; translating into visual dysfunction. Currently, no neuroprotective therapy with satisfying evidence can be offered to patients. Repetitive transorbital alternating current stimulation (rtACS) is a methodology applied to electrically stimulate the retina and the optic nerve and is considered having neuroprotective- and restorative potential. The goal of this pilot study is to assess safety, tolerability and preliminary efficacy of rtACS as a treatment to improve visual functional as well as structural retinal outcomes in patients with a first-ever episode of autoimmune acute ON.
To investigate which treatment option (corticosteroid treatment alone or combined corticosteroid treatment and vestibular rehabilitation) is the most effective in patients diagnosed with vestibular neuritis.
This is a search strategy for determining the prevalence of ocular complications in inflammatory rheumatic diseases for the purposes of a meta analysis.
This study evaluates the length of optic nerve lesion on 3D-DIR sequence as an imaging biomarker predictive of retinal axonal loss and visual disability, 12 months after the occurence of a first clinical episode of optic neuritis.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of single and multiple doses of BN201 in healthy subjects. This is a phase I, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to assess the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of BN201 in healthy subjects following single ascending doses and two cohorts of multiple doses. The study will be conducted in two parts (Part A and Part B). Part A (up to 8 single ascending doses (SD)) will be conducted in 32 subjects (4 interlocking cohorts of 8 subjects). Part B (up to 2 multiple ascending doses (MD)) will be conducted in 16 subjects (2 cohorts of 8 subjects). Subjects in Part A will undergo a screening period (Day -28 to Day -2), two in-patient treatment periods compromising 3 overnight stays (from Day -1 to Day 3) with a wash out period of at least 14 days between dose administrations and a follow up visit 12 to 16 days following administration of IMP. Subjects in Part B will undergo a screening period (Day -28 to Day -2), an in-patient treatment period compromising 7 overnight stays (from Day -1 to Day 7) and a follow up visit 12 to 16 days following final administration of Investigational Medicinal Product (IMP).
Patients aged between 18 and 70 with acute aquaporin-4 immunoglobulin G antibodies (AQP4-IgG) positive optic neuritis, irrespective of prior using of corticosteroids in this episode of disease, are chosen by the physician. Patients will then be randomized to receive high dose of intravenous corticosteroids combined with plasma exchange (PE), or merely high dose of intravenous corticosteroids followed subsequent taper. The main outcome of visual acuity and OCT parameters will be compared at baseline, one, three and six months after treatments, and other assessments will also be recorded and compared. This will allow for determination on whether additional PE plays a role in better prognosis in acute AQP4-IgG positive optic neuritis.