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Vasospastic Syndrome clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Vasospastic Syndrome.

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NCT ID: NCT01612273 Completed - Clinical trials for Vasospastic Syndrome

The Effect of Triflusal on Peripheral Microcirculation Dysfunction

Start date: April 2011
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To explore the efficacy of triflusal in patients with symptomatic peripheral microcirculation dysfunction. Triflusal is a salicylate compound approved in several countries as antithrombotic agent and it additionally has vasodilatory effect. The hypothesis is to explore if there is a improvement of peripheral microcirculation by triflusal.

NCT ID: NCT00675181 Completed - Clinical trials for Vasospastic Syndrome

Effects of Melatonin and Oxygen Consumption and Choroidal Blood Flow

MelO2
Start date: May 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Does melatonin affect basal metabolic rate, increase choroidal blood flow and reduce the vasospastic syndrome (VS)? The main questions are: Do women with VS exhibit... - a different basal metabolic rate - a reduced choroidal blood flow - a reduced increase of oxygen consumption after intake of ice-water - a different oxygen consumption after melatonin intake - a different choroidal blood flow after melatonin intake - a different oxygen consumption after melatonin intake and after intake of ice-water….?

NCT ID: NCT00409123 Completed - Clinical trials for Vasospastic Syndrome

Effect of Systemic Cooling in Vasospasms

Start date: September 2004
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This study tests whether women with Vasospastic Syndrome (VS) react more intensive than controls with distal vasomotions and choroidal blood flow changes to internal cooling/warming and external cooling/warming.

NCT ID: NCT00319371 Completed - Clinical trials for Vasospastic Syndrome

Registration of Skin-Temperatures and Sleep-Wake Behaviour

Start date: November 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

We study the skin-temperature (skin temperature measurement on different skin regions) and circadian rest-activity cycles (wrist activity monitoring) of 40 women in their daily life. This project will provide further information at which circadian phase vasospasms occur in daily routine life (one week recordings). Special interest lays on the time before sleep. The attained results could be used to establish a therapy with few side effects for people with difficulties initiating sleep because of vasospasm.