Loading clinical trials...
Loading clinical trials...
Showing 1-12 of 12 trials
NCT07305961
Multicentre retrospective, prospective, non-profit, national observational study
NCT06896929
Scabies is highly contagious,pruritic infestation of skin.Various treatment modalities have been used but search for ideal scabicide is ongoing.we wnt to coduct this study to compare the outcome of permethrin verses ivermectin in children for treatment of scabies .This randomized clinical trial will be done in children hospital lahore for 12 months.Sample size of 90 cases;30 in each group will be included through non probability consecutive sampling.Then patient will be randomly divided into 3 groups.In group A patient will be given 5% permethrin topical application to whole body single application. In Group B ,patients will be given topical permethrin for twice application 24 hrs appart ,In group C patients will be given Tablet Ivermectin single dose 200microgram/kg.Then patients will be examined after 2 weeks and 4 weeks for no of lesions and pruritis and cure will be labeled.All this information will be recorded on performa .Data will be entered and analysed by using SPSS version 26.Three groups will be compared for cure by using chi-square test.P value less than and equal to 0.05 will be considered as significant.
NCT02841215
Severe forms of scabies (crusted scabies and profuse scabies) require a specific treatment. Ivermectin is a recommended treatment in common forms of scabies and represents a promising treatment in crusted scabies in case reports. However, response to ivermectin remains variable among studies, and there is no consensus on the schemes to adopt (dosages and administrations). Ivermectin at 400 µg/kg has already been used, without showing toxicity (in head lice treatment in particular). Investigators propose to demonstrate that 400µg/kg ivermectin dosage will show better efficacy than a 200µg/kg in patients with severe forms of scabies (crusted and profuse).
NCT05819983
Scabies is a skin disease characterized by intense itching that worsens at night. It is very contagious, still has a high occurrence rate, and impacts patient quality of life. The use of scabicide followed by a clean and healthy lifestyle is the principle of scabies therapy. The primary treatment option for scabies is permethrin 5% cream. Ivermectin is an alternate treatment for scabies.
NCT05271968
Scabies is a parasitic pathology contracted mainly through human contamination. It is caused by a parasite (Sarcoptes Scabiei var. hominis) which lodges into the top layer of the epidermis creating a burrow, which can measure 5 mm to 15 mm, where the female lays her eggs. After 4-6 weeks the patient develops an allergic reaction to the presence of mite proteins and feces in the scabies burrow, causing intense itch and rash. The usual adult form, called common scabies, is characterized by this nocturnal pruritus, and typical and/or atypical lesions. The typical lesions are the vesicle (translucent vesicle on an erythematous base), the scabious burrow (due to the tunnel dug by the female in the stratum), and the papulo- nodule -nodular scabious (red/brown infiltrated on palpation, predominantly on the male genital areas). They predominate in certain regions: the interdigital region of the hands, the anterior face of the wrists, the external face of the elbows, the axillary region, the areolas, the nipples, the umbilical region, the male external genitalia, the buttock region, the face inner thighs. Scabies occurs worldwide. However, studies have shown a greater prevalence among populations that do not have access to common hygiene measures: poor, young children and elderly in resource -poor communities, migrant, homeless populations, etc. The "Baudelaire outpatient clinic" (BOPC) at St Antoine hospital in Paris offers general medicine consultations. It has the particularity of offering a so called "Permanent d'Accès Aux Soins" service that allowed any person without health assurance to have access to a general practitioner and treatment, free of charge and help to recover its social rights. Consequently, more than 60% of the patients encountered at the consultation of the BOPC are in a precarious situation. Usually, poor patients with scabies may be offered a shower and clean clothes at the BOPC Therefore it seemed to us the ideal place to evaluate a treatment's scabies in this population including the hygiene treatment.
NCT05198947
Scabies is associated with significant discomfort and social taboo. Existing treatment regimen frequently fails due to lack of patient compliance. We compared single use regimen to existing standard repeat application regimen for treatment of scabies.
NCT04814511
The ETSKABI study is a prospective, open-label, multicenter, initially single-armed and in case of treatment failure subsequently three-armed randomized clinical trial. Within the initial treatment phase, the to-date clinical efficacy of the standard therapy regimen according to the current German "S1-guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of scabies" is to be examined. The subsequent second phase focusses on three differently escalated treatment regimens in order to evaluate their potential to cure those patients still suffering from Scabies after standard therapy. In total, 183 patients with Scabies who meet all inclusion criteria and do not meet none of the exclusion criteria are to be enrolled and topically treated with Permethrin 5 % cream (up to two administrations, i.e. repeated one-time on day 14 in case of persisting Scabies). In case of treatment failure by the end of phase one, adult patients will be randomized to either receive an (i) escalated therapy with Permethrin 5 % cream (repeated topical administration on two consecutive days), (ii) an add-on-combination consisting of escalated therapy with Permethrin 5 % cream and Ivermectin p.o. or (iii) an escalated therapy with Permethrin 10 % cream (up to two administrations, i.e. repeated one-time on day 14 in case of persisting Scabies). The primary objective of the ETSKABI study is the clinical efficacy of the standard therapy by the end of phase one (standard therapy according to the S1-guideline). Beside this, clinical efficacy by the end of phase two (escalation phase) will be evaluated as well as adverse events in order to investigate over-all clinical safety.
NCT03236168
This is a pilot study evaluating if treatment for scabies also treats headlice in the same community
NCT03178942
Study to Evaluate the Therapeutic Equivalence of Permethrin Cream 5%in the Treatment of Scabies.
NCT03676140
This is a cluster randomised trial evaluating the safety of co-administering Azithromycin alongside the new IDA (Ivermectin, Diethylcarbamazine, Albendazole) combination treatment for LF. Treatment will be provided as a single dose Mass Drug Administration (MDA) to the whole community. Communities will be randomised to receive either treatment with IDA and Azithromycin on the same day or separately. Active monitoring for adverse events will be conducted and the frequency of adverse events compared between individuals receiving combined MDA or separate MDA.
NCT02254564
The main objective of this study is to identify unique DNA sequences within the genome of human scabies that can be utilized to identify the parasite through PCR.
NCT00262418
Comparison of the efficacy and safety of a single administration of ivermectin to a single administration of permethrin for the treatment of scabies