What You Need to Know About Soft Contact Lenses


 by: Daniel Irwin

Soft contact lenses are unquestionably the most commonly prescribed contact lens available.
Made of soft, flexible plastic, it is estimated that about 87% of contact lens wearers in the U.S. wear soft lenses.

Brief History

In 1971, Bausch & Lomb introduced the first commercially available soft contact lens.
For years, this conventional soft daily wear lens was the only type of soft contact lens available.
This lens ideally was meant to last between 6 and 12 months and required daily cleaning and weekly enzymatic treatment.

In 1981 the FDA approved the first contact lenses approved for extended or overnight wear.

It wasn?t until 1991 that the first frequent-replacement contact lenses were sold.
Frequent-replacement contacts are typically replaced every 1 to 3 months.
The next year, 1992, disposable contacts (disposed every 2 weeks or less) were introduced.

In less than a decade, frequent-replacement and disposable lenses became the lenses of choice for the vast majority of eye care providers.
Today approximately 75% of soft contact lens patients are wearing some sort of frequent-replacement or disposable lens.
Frequent-replacement and disposable contacts are available as both daily and extended wear.

Soft Contact Lens Options

As implied, daily wear contacts are removed and cleaned daily, while extended wear lenses can typically be worn continuously for up to 7 days (or more as CibaVision?s Focus? Night & Day? contacts have been approved for up to 30 days continuous wear).

Disposable contacts are, as the name implies, disposed on a regular period, while the non-disposable contacts are cleaned and disinfected before reinserting the contacts.

Patients who choose extended wear should be aware of the added risk of eye infections and complications that come with sleeping in contacts.
I typically discourage extended wear, but will fit contacts as extended wear only after the patient understands the added risk and agrees to be seen for more frequent follow-ups.
I also will use a silicone hydrogel lens material for these patients.

Types of Soft Contact Lenses Available

Soft contact lenses are available for a variety of visual corrections.

For patients with significant astigmatism, I will often use a soft toric contact lens.
Toric contacts have improved greatly over the last few years.
Indeed, many patients who have never been able to wear contacts due to their astigmatic prescription are now able to successfully wear contact lenses.

Soft bifocal contacts are a relatively recent option for patients requiring a reading prescription or bifocal.
Along these same lines, monovision continues to be a good option for these same patients. Monovision correction does not use a bifocal contact, but rather uses one contact for the distance vision (usually the dominant eye) and one contact for the near vision.

Soft contact lenses come as either clear or with a visibility (handling) tint.
The visibility generally has no effect on eye color, but is there to help you see the lens while you?re handling it.
These lenses are not the same as cosmetic soft contacts.

Cosmetic soft contacts have been popular sellers since their introduction.
Now patients with or without a prescription can change the color of their eyes with colored or tinted contacts.

CibaVision?s Wild Eyes? contact lenses and CooperVision?s Crazy Lenses are novelty lenses that are fun to fit around Halloween.

Concluding Thoughts

Part of the reason for the success of soft contact lenses is the comfort these lenses offer over rigid gas permeable (RGP) contacts.
As a result, they have a much shorter adaptation period.
However, in some cases with soft contacts, vision may not be as sharp as with RGP contacts.

When prescribing a soft contact, my first lens of choice is CibaVision?s O2Optix?.
This lens can be worn for up to one week extended wear or two weeks daily wear.
For patients who may not want a disposable lens (this is very rare), I will recommend CibaVision?s Cibasoft? Visitint? standard daily wear.

For patients who experience drying with their contacts, I will often recommend contacts with newer, moisture-retaining materials.
Such contact lenses include Proclear? Compatibles by CooperVision and Acuvue? Advance? with Hydraclear by Vistakon (Johnson & Johnson).
Indeed, Vistakon has recently launched the Acuvue? Oasys? with Hydraclear, which is primarily targeted for patients who experience contact lens dryness.

Regardless of your own situation, chances are good that you will end up wearing a soft lens if you decide to try contacts
Be sure to discuss with your eye care provider all the options you may have, given your prescription, age, needs, and expectations.?

About The Author

Dr. Dan Irwin is a practicing optometrist in southeastern Michigan with over 16 years experience fitting contact lenses.
For more insightful information on contact lens related topics such as discount contact lenses and buying contact lenses online, please go to http://www.Contact-Lens-Online-Guide.com.



Pay Only for the Digital Camera Features You Need

Pay Only for the Digital Camera Features You Need


 by: Gareth Lenzy

Focus on Features When Buying a Digital Camera

Being well informed about the main digital camera features before shopping means you will know which are worth the extra cost. Reading reviews and talking cameras with friends will be helpful, but here are the key points to consider.

The first thing you will notice when looking at digital cameras is the term megapixel is used often. Pixels are the colored dots that make up a digital image. The term megapixel means one million pixels. Most models are between two and five megapixels.

The more megapixels the sharper the image, generally, but the size of enlargement is the important issue. You will be okay with three megapixels for enlargements up to an 8x10, but for larger photos you'll want more. If you plan to go big, the extra expense for a five megapixel is worth it. But save your money if you will use the photos...

Pay Only for the Digital Camera Features You Need
Contact lenses > Pay Only for the Digital Camera Features You Need

Is There a Perfect Contact Lens For Dry Eyes?

Is There a Perfect Contact Lens For Dry Eyes?

 by: Steve Cogger

Do you have dry eyes? Whether you just feel like you have dry eyes or your doctor has told you, there are contact lenses made just for you. Dry eye contact lenses vary depending on the type of dry eye. Manufacturers of contact lenses have focused a lot of time and research into developing the perfect dry eye contact lens.

A dry eye can be caused by numerous factors, and therefore, the perfect dry eye contact lens does not exist. The good news is contact lenses are designed for all different types of dry eyes. So chances are there is a contact lens for your dry eyes.

In its simplest state, dry eye is a lack of tears on the eye. In some cases it is a slow tear production rate, some instances it is a fast evaporation of tears, and in others it is a question of tear quality. Given the complexities of dry eye syndrome, there is no one contact lens that can possibly work on every dry...

Is There a Perfect Contact Lens For Dry Eyes?
Contact lenses > Is There a Perfect Contact Lens For Dry Eyes?

Clear Readers: Reading Glasses With an Invisible Presence

Clear Readers: Reading Glasses With an Invisible Presence


 by: Steve Cogger

When faced with the reality of having to wear reading glasses some people will try anything to avoid them.
There is another option that allows you to wear reading glasses, but keep it low key so others may not even notice you have them on.
Clear plastic reading glasses have an invisible look to them.
For those not happy with the idea of wearing reading glasses this may be their answer.

The idea of plastic frames can turn some people off. In the past plastic frames were quite heavy as compared to metal frames.
However, the technology today has allowed for the creation of lightweight plastics, like zyl or TR-90 memory flex plastic.
TR-90 memory plastic also offers an added benefit of being flexible that makes frames much more durable.
Memory plastics have the ability to form to the wearers face to provide a comfortable,...

Clear Readers: Reading Glasses With an Invisible Presence
Contact lenses > Clear Readers: Reading Glasses With an Invisible Presence

Contact Existing Customers To Increase Business Sales

Contact Existing Customers To Increase Business Sales


 by: Abe Cherian

One of the best ways to increase your sales and one that won't cost you a lot or take a huge amount of time is by selling more to your existing customers. This can be a lengthy process and expensive to win over a new customer. between advertising, sales calls, and approvals. With existing customers the process can be much quicker, smoother, and less costly.

Existing customers already know you and what you can do. Your challenge is to learn about additional opportunities within your company, and go after them.

If the cost of sale for an existing customer is so much lower than for a new customer, why don't small companies go after their existing customers more aggressively?

Because they have been conditioned to grow their customer list, and because they simply may not realize the potential that exists in obtaining repeat sales from existing customers.

Bringing...

Contact Existing Customers To Increase Business Sales
Contact lenses > Contact Existing Customers To Increase Business Sales

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