prilocaine
prilocaine is a pharmaceutical drug with 15 clinical trials. Currently 1 active trials ongoing. Historical success rate of 100.0%.
Success Metrics
Based on 12 completed trials
Phase Distribution
Phase Distribution
2
Early Stage
0
Mid Stage
8
Late Stage
Highest Phase Reached
Phase 4Trial Status & Enrollment
100.0%
12 of 12 finished
0.0%
0 ended early
1
trials recruiting
15
all time
Detailed Status
Development Timeline
Analytics
Development Status
Trials by Phase
Trials by Status
Recent Activity
Hyperbaric Bupivacaine Versus Hyperbaric Prilocaine in Spinal Anaesthesia
Unilateral Intrathecal Bupivacaine Versus Prilocaine on Postoperative Spontaneous Voiding
Effect of Prilocaine vs Bupivacaine on Hemodynamics in Spinal Anesthesia for Geriatric Patients
Comparing the Effect of Spinal Bupivacaine Versus Spinal Prilocaine on Maternal Blood Pressure in Cesarean Section
Comparison of Infraclavicular Brachial Plexus Block and Local Anesthesia in Arteriovenous Fistula Surgeries and Their Effects on Tissue Oxygen Saturation
Clinical Trials (15)
Hyperbaric Bupivacaine Versus Hyperbaric Prilocaine in Spinal Anaesthesia
Unilateral Intrathecal Bupivacaine Versus Prilocaine on Postoperative Spontaneous Voiding
Effect of Prilocaine vs Bupivacaine on Hemodynamics in Spinal Anesthesia for Geriatric Patients
Comparing the Effect of Spinal Bupivacaine Versus Spinal Prilocaine on Maternal Blood Pressure in Cesarean Section
Comparison of Infraclavicular Brachial Plexus Block and Local Anesthesia in Arteriovenous Fistula Surgeries and Their Effects on Tissue Oxygen Saturation
Effect of Prilocaine on Motor Block During Caesarean Section
Comparison of Hyperbaric Prilocaine 2% 50 Mg and Hyperbaric Bupivacaine 0.5% 12.5 Mg Against Spinal Anesthesia Recovery Time in Cystoscopy Procedure
Spinal Prilocaine for Caesarian Sections
Decision Support for Intraoperative Low Blood Pressure
Pharmacokinetic Study of Nanoencapsulated Gel of Lidocaine, Prilocaine and Combination of Lidocaine and Prilocaine
Spinal Anesthesia for Outpatient Abdominal Wall Surgery: Comparison of Bupivacaine, 2-chloroprocaine and Prilocaine
Spinal Anesthesia Versus Combined Sciatic-femoral Nerve Block for Outpatient Knee Arthroscopy
Discharge Conditions of Spinal Anesthesia With Heavy Prilocaine-Fentanyl and Heavy Bupivacaine-Fentanyl
Anesthetic Efficacy of Liposomal Prilocaine in Maxillary Infiltration Anesthesia
EEG and Auditory Evoked Potentials During Local Anesthesia
All 15 trials loaded
Drug Details
- Intervention Type
- DRUG
- Total Trials
- 15