View clinical trials related to Retinal Vein Occlusion.
Filter by:This trial is a phase II, multi-center, single-masked (assessors) dose-ranging study designed to evaluate the comparative safety and preliminary efficacy of two dosage regimens of the IBE-814 IVT Dexamethasone Implant in patients with DMO and RVO.
This is an investigator initiated prospective open-label, within-patient, masked, randomized study in patients with neovascular AMD, DME, or RVO undergoing bilateral anti-VEGF injections. Patients will be randomized into two cohorts (Cohort 1 and Cohort 2) and then followed for 3 consecutive injection visits. Treatment will be rendered at each injection visit based on the individualized routine established anti-VEGF injection interval for each patient.
The study will evaluate the safety of ophthalmic bevacizumab in subjects diagnosed with a retinal condition that would benefit from treatment with intravitreal injection of bevacizumab, including: exudative age-related macular degeneration, diabetic macular edema, or branch retinal vein occlusion.
This study will perform a prospective, longitudinal analysis of clinical and imaging findings from normal controls and subjects with retinal vascular disease to better define the diagnostic imaging criteria that signify change in disease stage. This includes disease progression in early stages of disease or disease regression with appropriate standard-of-care treatment.
Prospective, single-center, randomized, clinical trial (RCT) comparing the time efficiency and safety of a single-use intravitreal injection (IVI) guide versus a traditional technique using a dual blade speculum among patients undergoing IVI for various indications.
Intravitreal injections of Ranibizumab will be applied in all patients according to treatment guidelines. The experimental group will receive additional targeted laser photocoagulation of the peripheral areas of capillary non-perfusion (up to 4 laser treatments within 1st year of the study). Based on the long-term observation after CoRaLa I study an importantly shorter duration of treatment and a relevant reduction of the total number of re-injections in RL patients is expected.
In patients treated for exudative age-related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetes, retinal venous occlusion (OVR), or other conditions causing macular edema, treatments with anti-angiogenic intravitreal injections (IVT) are widely used both for their anti-angiogenic action. Patients often have injections for many years, sometimes monthly or every 2 months. The discontinuation of treatment with repeated injections of anti-angiogenic agents, linked to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic will potentially impact the visual acuity, the ophthalmological state and the quality of life of the patients concerned, therefore it is relevant to analyze the consequences the breakdown of usual care in this population.
A prospective interventional case series study was conducted on 20 eyes of 20 patients with active myopic choroidal neovascularisation (CNV) ,20 eyes with resistant diabetic macular edema and 15 eyes with non ischaemic central retinal vein occlusion(CRVO) after approval of the Ethical Committee of the Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University . All procedures were carried out under the tenets of the Helsinki Declaration. Written consent was provided by all participants after discussing the procedure, alternative treatment plans, follow-up schedules, and possible benefits and risks.
Evaluation if a computer-based tutorial ("MacInfo" tool) improves the patients' knowledge about intravitreal drug injections, associated risks, and the underlying diseases of treatment-naive patients.
This study mainly observed the ischemic index and vascular leakage index changes on ultra-wide field fluorescence angiography after anti-VEGF treatment , and whether these changes correlated with treatment efficacy in patients with macular edema secondary to retinal vein occlusion.