View clinical trials related to Seasonal Allergic Rhinitis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of as-needed treatment with nasal carbon dioxide in patients with Seasonal Allergic Rhinitis symptoms.
The objective of this trial is to assess the clinical efficacy of the modified extract (depigmented and polymerised with glutaraldehyde)of the subcutaneous injection of Phleum pratense pollen in the treatment of patients affected by allergic rhinitis/ rhinoconjunctivitis ( with or without episodic asthma) induced by hypersensitivity to grass pollen, evaluating the Score regarding Symptoms and consumption of the medication.
The purpose of this study is to determine if the combination of two allergy medications (formulated azelastine/fluticasone product)is more effective than placebo or either component medication alone (azelastine or fluticasone).
The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the efficacy (% of change from baseline) of desloratadine to improve the nasal total symptom score of SAR to cypress pollen.
Randomised, double-blind and prospective clinical study to examine the mechanism of action of the Petasites hybridus leaf extract IG-RD-001 (Ze-339, petasol butenoate complex) compared to desloratadine and placebo in patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis of all degrees of severity (provoked by grasses). The treatment arm with desloratadine is an established standard treatment and is intended to ensure the comparative methodology of the study.
This is a phase 2, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, 2-week, multi-center, dose-range-finding study in male or female patients (12 years and older) with SAR.
The purpose of this study is to compare the efficacy of Olopatadine Nasal Spray with Azelastine Nasal Spray when treatments are utilized in conjunction with Fluticasone Nasal Spray for the treatment of seasonal allergic rhinitis.
The purpose of this study is to determine if one allergy medication (0.15% azelastine hydrochloride) is more effective than Placebo alone
This was a 1-week study of desloratadine (DL) plus oxybutynin (OXY) at two dose levels in the treatment of post-nasal drip in participants with seasonal allergic rhinitis. Participants received either desloratadine twice a day, oxybutynin twice a day, desloratadine plus lower-dose oxybutynin twice a day, desloratadine plus higher-dose oxybutynin twice a day, or placebo for 7 days.
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.