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NCT07068256
Several studies globally have assessed the efficacy of terbinafine and itraconazole in the treatment of tinea capitis, but local data in this regard is scarce. Therefore, this study was planned with the aim of assessing the difference between the therapeutic efficacy of itraconazole pulse therapy and terbinafine in children with tinea capitis.
NCT07184203
A study to compare the efficacy of daily therapy versus pulse therapy of oral itraconazole in the treatment of tinea capitis in children based on clinical, mycological and dermoscopic evaluation.
NCT06980493
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if topical amphotericin b solution works to treat resistant cases of tinea capitis in children. It will also learn about the safety of drug. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does amphotericin b solution effective in cases not cured by systemic antifungal tab? Participants will: use topical amphotericin b solution every day for8 weeks Visit the clinic once every 1 week for follow up then follow up after 1 month and fungal culture will be done to test if the treatment working
NCT04144491
This is a nutritional trial with two arms: 1) Intervention arm of Probiotic Yoghurt containing Lactobacillus rhamnosus yoba 2012 and 2) Control arm of custard-like dairy product. The study subjects are 200 children between the age of 3-6 years that attend a school in Southwestern Uganda, Sheema district. Children will be randomized and enrolled in either the yoghurt (100 children) or the placebo (100 children) arm. The children will be monitored for 3 weeks in the baseline in regards to the incidence of common childhood diseases. During these three weeks, stool, saliva and urine samples will be collected. Also measurement of anthropometric indicators (weight and height) will take place. Subsequently, the children will consume either 100ml yoghurt or 100ml placebo product, once per day for five days per week for nine weeks, while being daily monitored in regards to the incidence of common childhood diseases. The same samples (stool, urine and saliva) and assessments (anthropometric) will take place at end line.
NCT02550496
Waiting for a proof by mycological culture is usually necessary before starting a systemic antifungal therapy. It therefore seems to us interesting to evaluate the benefit of using dermoscopy in clinical diagnosis of Tinea Capitis.
NCT00117767
Tinea capitis is a dermatophyte infection of the scalp hair follicles, which occurs primarily in children. Hair loss, hair breakage, scaling, plus various degrees of erythema, pustules and pruritus are the primary clinical signs which can be associated with tinea capitis. The infection is caused by a relatively small group of dermatophytes in the genera Trichophyton and Microsporum. Terbinafine hydrochloride is a synthetic allylamine derivative antifungal agent. This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of terbinafine in children with tinea capitis.
NCT00224926
To explore carrier and infection status of T.tonsurans tinea capitis and characterize the host-pathogen interaction as it relates to the disease presentation. The general hypothesis for this study is as follows: the type of genotypic and phenotypic variant to which a child is exposed accounts for the presentation status observed in Trichophyton tonsurans infection.The global outcome of this investigation is to reveal potential new drug targets designed to improve treatment outcomes in these children.
NCT00127868
Antifungal shampoos have been used as supplements to oral griseofulvin to help eradicate tinea capitis (also known as ringworm of the scalp) more quickly. While selenium sulfide shampoo has been the gold standard, its strong odor and its drying effect on the scalp discourage many patients from using it. Meanwhile, no other antifungal shampoo has been rigorously evaluated for efficacy. Therefore, while physicians are prescribing griseofulvin accompanied by any of a number of antifungal shampoos for tinea capitis, it is not known which antifungal shampoos (excluding selenium sulfide) actually significantly reduce time to cure, nor which do so the fastest. Scalp ringworm can also re-occur in the same child. To date, no studies have been done to find out whether or not the use of antifungal shampoos can prevent the recurrence of scalp ringworm. In this study, children ages 1-12 years old, who have clinically diagnosed tinea capitis, will all be prescribed oral griseofulvin for 8 weeks. In addition, they will be randomly assigned to use either selenium sulfide shampoo, ketoconazole shampoo, ciclopirox shampoo, or baby shampoo twice a week for 8 weeks. After 8 weeks, griseofulvin will be stopped. All patients will continue using the same assigned shampoo twice weekly for 24 weeks, while continuing to return to clinic every 4 weeks for scalp evaluation.