Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00366067

Study of Efficacy of Phenytoin in Therapy of Children With Bronchial Asthma

Randomised, Placebo Controlled, Double Blind, Parallel Group 3-Months Study of Phenytoin Efficacy in Children for Therapy of Bronchial Asthma

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (planned)
Sponsor
Centre of Chinese Medicine, Georgia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
4 Years – 14 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study was to determine whether antiepileptic drug phenytoin is effective in the treatment of chronic asthma in children.

Detailed description

Effective therapy of asthma still remains quite serious problem. According GINA definition, asthma is an inflammatory disorder. Consequently, modern pharmacotherapy of asthma provides wide use of anti-inflammatory drugs. But asthma also is a paroxysmal disorder: many specialists and even some guidelines underline paroxysmal clinical picture of asthma. Besides this, according to some authors, neurogenic inflammation may play important role in asthma mechanism. It is known that some other neurogenic inflammatory paroxysmal disorders exist, and they are migraine and trigeminal neuralgia. Antiepileptic drug phenytoin is very effective in therapy of trigeminal neuralgia - more than in 70-80% of cases. Other antiepileptic drugs, salts of valproic acid, are effective in the treatment of migraine. If bronchial asthma also is paroxysmal inflammatory disease, like migraine and trigeminal neuralgia, it is possible that some antiepileptic drugs also are very effective in asthma therapy. We perform a double-blind, placebo-controlled 3-month trial for evaluation of phenytoin efficacy in therapy of bronchial asthma in children. Phenytoin is a well-known, comparatively safe and effective antiepileptic drug with low cost. According our previous data, phenytoin is effective drug for asthma therapy in adults. Comparison: children will receive investigational drug in addition to their usual routine antiasthmatic treatment, compared to patients received placebo in addition to their usual routine antiasthmatic treatment.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGPhenytoin

Timeline

Start date
2006-08-01
Completion
2007-02-01
First posted
2006-08-18
Last updated
2009-02-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Georgia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00366067. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.