Retina Foundation Of The Southwest
Clinical trials sponsored by Retina Foundation Of The Southwest, explained in plain language.
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Movie therapy may fix Kids' eye misalignment without surgery
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests whether watching specially designed movies for 8 weeks can improve eye alignment in children with intermittent exotropia (a condition where one eye drifts outward). Forty children will watch these movies at home, and researchers will measure how much their eyes s…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Retina Foundation of the Southwest • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 10:10 UTC
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No more sticky patches? new study tests Glasses-Based lazy eye therapy
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests a new way to treat amblyopia (lazy eye) in children aged 3 to 12 without using sticky eye patches. Instead, children wear special glasses that blur the stronger eye while watching videos, aiming to improve vision in the weaker eye. Researchers want to see if this…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Retina Foundation of the Southwest • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 10:07 UTC
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New lazy eye treatment lets kids watch videos at home
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests a home-based treatment for amblyopia (lazy eye) in children aged 8 to 12. Using the Curesight™ system, children stream videos on a computer where the weaker eye sees the full screen clearly while part of the image is blurred for the stronger eye. The goal is to i…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Retina Foundation of the Southwest • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 26, 2026 10:05 UTC
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New hope for lazy eye: no patching needed!
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests new binocular treatments for amblyopia (lazy eye) in children aged 4 to 10. The goal is to improve vision more completely and stably than standard patching. Participants will use special eye exercises or devices instead of wearing a patch over the stronger eye.
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Retina Foundation of the Southwest • Aim: Disease control
Last updated May 20, 2026 11:57 UTC
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Movie therapy for lazy eye: a fun alternative to patching?
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study tests whether watching specially designed movies can improve vision in young children (ages 3-7) with lazy eye (amblyopia) better than the standard treatment of wearing an eye patch. The movies are designed to make both eyes work together, which may be easier for child…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Retina Foundation of the Southwest • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated May 15, 2026 11:54 UTC