View clinical trials related to Onychomycosis of Toenail.
Filter by:This study aims to assess if laser treatment can cure fungal infection in toenails. Nail clippings from eligible subjects were obtained and randomised into two groups. All nail clippings were treated once with a 1064 nm Nd:YAG-laser. Before and after treatment, nail clippings were tested for fungal infection by microscopy and by culture.
The efficacy and safety of Solver Pen (prototype number X92001704) is evaluated in this randomized, open label, controlled, investigator-blinded, comparative clinical trial in 76 patients. Subjects are treated with either the test medical device (Solver Pen) or the comparator (Loceryl, 5% amorolfine), respectively, for a period of 90 days. The primary objective of the investigation is the increase of percentage of healthy surface on the great toenail at study end versus baseline, as evaluated by a blinded investigator. Patients are followed up for a period of 90 days, with visits at D0 (baseline), D30, D60 and D90, respectively.
This study evaluates the effect of the medical device "Excilor® Forte" in the treatment of toenail onychomycosis. Half of the participants will receive the tested product and the other half will receive a comparator (Amorolfin 5%). Patients will be followed during 6 months.
A study to determine if a three-treatment protocol with the RenewalNailâ„¢ plasma treatment system over a week will result in mycological cure and/or clear nail growth on the treated hallux toe.
This clinical trial seeks to investigate if an experimental medical device, ABL01, can be used to treat onychomycosis. In a 1-year trial the effectiveness of ABL01 will be tested against placebo in 70 study subjects with onychomycosis of the big toe nail. The endpoint of the trial is clinical improvement and cure at the 6 and 12 month time-point.
This study will test how well efinaconazole solution (Jublia) works to treat toenail fungal infections in patients who wear polish compared to those who do not.