View clinical trials related to Perennial Allergic Rhinitis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of probiotics eN-Lac® capsules (Lactobacillus paracasei GMNL-32) for the treatment of children with perennial allergic rhinitis(PAR).
6-month safety extension study in subjects who have completed Study 060-633 (NCT00953147). Evaluating the long-term safety of ciclesonide HFA nasal aerosol 160 μg administered once-daily in patients with Perennial Allergic Rhinitis.
To demonstrate the effects of ciclesonide applied as a nasal aerosol and ciclesonide aqueous (AQ) nasal spray on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of an Investigational use of an allergy medication (MP03-33) used to treat perennial allergic rhinitis (PAR) to placebo (a nasal spray that contains no medicine). In addition, the study will also compare the safety and effectiveness of an investigational use of another allergy medication (MP03-36) used to treat perennial allergic rhinitis to placebo.
This study will assess the ability of montelukast to improve the signs and symptoms of perennial allergic rhinitis compared to placebo. Cetirizine is included in the study as an active control.
This is a 6-month multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group, efficacy and safety study of ciclesonide HFA nasal aerosol administered once-daily to male and female subjects 12 years or older diagnosed with perennial allergic rhinitis (PAR).
The purpose of this study is to noninvasively measure the anti-inflammatory effect of levocetirizine after two weeks of treatment in allergic rhinitis subjects.
This was a crossover study designed to see if patients with allergy symptoms preferred Clarinex® or Zyrtec®. Patients were randomized to take 7 days of Clarinex or Zyrtec treatment, followed by a 5 to 28-day washout period (days when no drug is given), followed by 7 days of the opposite treatment. At the end of each 7-day treatment, patients were asked questions to determine which drug, Clarinex or Zyrtec, the patient prefers more.
This was a crossover study designed to see if patients with allergy symptoms preferred Clarinex® or Zyrtec®. Patients were randomized to take 7 days of Clarinex or Zyrtec treatment, followed by a 5 to 28-day washout period (days when no drug is given), followed by 7 days of the opposite treatment. At the end of each 7-day treatment, patients were asked questions to determine which drug, Clarinex or Zyrtec, the patient prefers more.
This was a crossover study designed to see if patients with allergy symptoms preferred Clarinex® or Zyrtec®. Patients were randomized to take 7 days of Clarinex or Zyrtec treatment, followed by a 5 to 28-day washout period (days when no drug is given), followed by 7 days of the opposite treatment. At the end of each 7-day treatment, patients were asked questions to determine which drug, Clarinex or Zyrtec, the patient prefers more.