View clinical trials related to Optic Nerve Diseases.
Filter by:The clinical trial will be a phase 1, semi-experimental trial, which will be performed in Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital. Twenty patients will be recruited in this study starting from the 2nd year of the project to the 3rd year of the project and will go through comprehensive eye and systemic examination in the Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital. Indirect TON (ITON) patients are defined as reduced best corrected visual acuity (BCVA), visual field, color vision, and positive relatively afferent pupillary defect (RAPD) with normal fundus and optic nerve examination and no evidence of direct trauma to optic nerve on spiral orbital and optic canal computer tomography (CT) scan. Therefore, all patients will have examinations of BCVA, visual field, color vision, RAPD, FVEP, CT scan, and IOP for defining ITON patients one day before Neulasta injection. Patient also underwent renal function test, liver function test, coagulation test, and complete blood count before the treatment. Patients who meet the enrollment criteria (inclusion and exclusion) will be fully informed of this treatment and then an informed consent will be obtained. After patient enrolment, the patient will be intravitreally administrated by 0.15 mL of Neulasta in the injured eye. Firstly, the injured eye will be treated with iodine solution for disinfection and then will be treated with Alcaine eye drop for topic anesthesia. The 0.15 mL of Neulasta will be filled into 1 mL of syringe equipped with 30 gauge beveled needle for intravitreal injection. During injection of Neulasta solution, the anterior chamber decompression will be performed for IOP balance. The aqueous humor from anterior chamber will be collected for further microarray analysis. After Neulasta treatment, Tobradex eyedrops (Alcon) will be given on the injected eye, four times a day. Patient will be hospitalized for one day to monitor BCVA, IOP, fundus condition, complete blood count, and any adverse event. During 3-month follow-up trial, each patient will be regularly monitored 7 days and 1, 3 months after treatments by determining the BCVA, the RPAD, the color vision, visual field, the latency of P-100 wave in FVEP, and the RNFL thickness, IOP, and complete blood count.
Handheld optical coherence tomography (OCT) has become an important imaging modality to evaluate the pediatric retina. The objective of this pilot study is to compare a new contact OCT system (Theia Imaging) with an investigational noncontact OCT system (Duke Biomedical Engineering) to assess their ability to image the pediatric retina. The investigators hypothesize that the contact OCT system is superior in imaging larger areas of the retina (larger field-of-view), while it has similar resolution to image the retina substructures (non-inferior image quality).
The purpose of the study is to evaluate the neuroprotective efficacy of hyperbaric oxygen for the treatment in patients with optic neuropathy.
The goal of this clinical intervention is to test if two forms of transcranial current stimulation, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) or transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) can alleviate neuropathic eye pain in a sample of 20 patients. The main aims are: - Test if tDCS/tACS can alleviate neuropathic eye pain and/or other cerebral symptoms: brain fatigue, migraine, light sensitivity, etc. - Test if one stimulation method is superior to the other Patients will be treated for a total of fifteen 30-minute stimulation sessions, three times a day over a five-day period, each stimulation separated by approximately 4 hours, with either active tACS or tDCS over the scalp corresponding to primary sensory and motor areas. The patients will have questionnaires to monitor subjective experiences and pupillometry before and after treatment to monitor experimental outcomes.
The objective of this clinical study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and preliminary efficacy of NFS-02 in the treatment of LHON caused by mitochondrial ND1 gene mutation. This study will enroll subjects aged ≥ 18 years old and ≤ 75 years old to receive a single unilateral intravitreal (IVT) injection of NFS-02 to evaluate its safety, tolerability and preliminary efficacy. The clinical manifestations of all subjects are to be reduced visual acuity caused by LHON associated with ND1 mutation, with laboratory test showing G3460A mutation (a CLIA-certified laboratory) and reduced visual acuity lasted for > 6 months and < 10 years.
The goal of this double-blind prospective randomized clinical trial is to determine if the effect of intravenous erythropoietin is superior to the effect of intravenous methylprednisolone in cases of toxic optic neuropathy 4 weeks after therapeutic intervention. The main question it aims to answer: • Is there a difference in the visual recovery of toxic optic neuropathies treated with intravenous methylprednisolone in comparison with those treated with intravenous erythropoietin?
The overall aim of this study is to see whether long-term electrical stimulation with a home-stimulation device works well and is safe for the treatment of open-angle glaucoma. Open-Angle Glaucoma is a disease where the nerves in the back of your eye die off faster than expected regardless of your eye pressure.
Intraocular tamponade used in vitrectomy operations may affects retinal function in various mechanisms.
The aim of the project is to create a new, non-invasive and safe protocol for the early diagnosis of various types of optic neuropathies with the use of diffusion magnetic resonance imaging
The purpose of the study is to use new diagnostic methods (OCT and OCT-A) to shed light on risk factors for the development of NA-AION. The risk factors we are focusing on are comorbidities along with anatomical and vascular characteristics of the optic nerve.