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Posner Schlossman Syndrome clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04590183 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Posner Schlossman Syndrome

The Effectiveness and Safety of FK-506 for the Treatment of Posner-Schlossman Syndrome

Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To evaluate the effectiveness and safety of tacrolimus eye drops (FK-506) in the treatment of Posner-Schlossman Syndrome. It is expected to collect 30 patients with PSS who are in the Ophthalmology Department of Peking University Third Hospital. The included PSS patients were divided into experimental group and control group using simple randomization method. Among them, the experimental group was treated with FK-506 twice a day, and the control group was treated with prednisolone acetate ophthalmic suspension 1% 4 times a day. For all PSS patients whose intraocular pressure is higher than 30mmHg, also add brinzolamide eye drops 3 times a day. Best corrected visual acuity, Goldmann intraocular pressure, anterior section photographs, corneal endothelial cells,corneal confocal microscope, Heidelberg retinal nerve analysis, Octopus visual field were examined on baseline and 1 week, 2 weeks, 3 weeks, 4 weeks after the treatment.

NCT ID: NCT03233477 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Posner Schlossman Syndrome

Patient Registry of Posner-Schlossman Syndrome

Start date: July 31, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Posner-Schlossman syndrome, or glaucomatocyclitic crisis, is a condition characterized by recurrent, acute attacks of mild, nongranulomatous, anterior uveitis accompanied by markedly elevated intraocular pressure. Most of patients are the 20 to 50-year-old young adults, with unilateral eye involvement. PSS was originally deemed benign, but is now recognized as a relatively rare cause of chronic secondary glaucoma,especially in patients with recurrent episodes. This relatively rare disease is likely the result of the infections of a variety of organisms, and the bulk of literature supports the cytomegalovirus (CMV) as the leading cause. This study is an observational study that does not interfere with the normal clinical diagnosis and treatment process. The investigators in this study focus on observing the clinical symptoms and outcome of PSS, analyzing the factors that affect the prognosis of PSS, studying the association of its pathogenesis with the psychological status and the behavioral types of PSS patients; exploring the relationship between infection (CMV, HSV, Hp) and PSS; and studying the changes of local and systemic cytokine expression and its significance in patients with PSS.