Purpose: The aim was to compare vision correction wearing time between myopic children and teenagers in a clinical trial of contact lenses and spectacles.
Methods: Parents of subjects in the Adolescent and Child Health Initiative for Vision Empowerment (ACHIEVE) study provided wearing times for spectacle and contact lens wear. Hours wearing primary correction and total correction were compared between the two treatment groups. Other factors hypothesised to be associated with wearing time were analysed.
Results: The average wearing time of the primary correction differed significantly with the wearing time for the spectacles group being 91.5 hours per week compared to 80.3 hours per week for the contact lens wearers (p < 0.0001). Total correction time was slightly higher for the contact lens wearers, 97.5 hours per week, after accounting for time wearing spectacles. Higher refractive error was strongly related to longer wearing times (p < 0.0002). Age and treatment group were associated with wearing time (p = 0.005). Young contact lens wearers wore their lenses less than young spectacle wearers and older contact lens wearers. Low scores on an appearance quality-of-life scale were associated with longer wearing time in spectacle wearers compared to the low- and high-scoring contact lens wearers. Gender, spectacle satisfaction and activities were not related to wearing time.
Conclusions: While contact lens wearers, on average, wear their contact lenses less than spectacle wearers, they spend roughly the same amount of time wearing a refractive correction. Higher refractive error resulted in longer wearing times for both spectacle and contact lens wearers. Younger contact lens wearers wore their contact lenses for shorter periods than the spectacle wearers, but still wore them, on average, 74.4 hours per week (about 10 hours per day), suggesting that contact lenses are a viable alternative mode of correction for children.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1444-0938.2010.00480.x | DOI Listing |
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt
January 2025
School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Purpose: To assess the repeatability of lipid layer thickness (LLT) measurement using the LipiView® interferometer after daily disposable contact lens (CL) wear and correlation with ocular comfort in soft contact lens wearers.
Methods: A prospective study was conducted over two consecutive months, wherein CL wearers (n = 20) wore either Somofilcon A or Verofilcon A daily disposable CLs in a crossover design, switching lenses after 1 month. The pre-corneal tear film LLT was measured at the end of each month after CLs had been worn for at least 6 h.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt
January 2025
Contact Lens and Visual Optics Laboratory, Optometry and Vision Science, Centre for Vision and Eye Research, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Introduction: Tear exchange during contact lens wear is essential for ocular surface integrity, facilitating debris removal, and maintaining corneal metabolism. Fluorophotometry and fluorogram methods are typically used to measure tear exchange, which require hardware modifications to a slit lamp biomicroscope. This manuscript introduces an alternative method using a corneoscleral profilometer, the Eye Surface Profiler (ESP), to quantify tear exchange during corneal and scleral rigid lens wear by assessing fluorescence intensity changes over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
January 2025
Key Laboratory of Green Printing, CAS Research/Education Center for Excellence in Molecular Sciences, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences (ICCAS), Beijing Engineering Research Center of Nanomaterials for Green Printing Technology, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences (BNLMS), Beijing, 100080, P. R. China.
More than 70% of human information comes from vision. The eye is one of the most attractive sensing sites to collect biological parameters. However, it is urgent to develop a cost-effective and easy-to-use approach to monitor eyeball information in a minimally invasive way instead of current smart contact lenses or camera-based eyeglasses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImportance: For myopia control to be beneficial, it would be important that the benefit of treatment (slowed eye growth) is not lost because of faster than normal growth (rebound) after discontinuing treatment.
Objective: To determine whether there is a loss of treatment effect (rebound) after discontinuing soft multifocal contact lenses in children with myopia.
Design, Setting, And Participants: The Bifocal Lenses in Nearsighted Kids 2 (BLINK2) cohort study involved children with myopia (aged 11-17 years at BLINK2 baseline) who completed the BLINK Study randomized clinical trial.
Tunis Med
January 2025
Department of Ophtalmology, Habib Bourguiba University Hospital, University of Sfax, Sfax, Tunisia.
Aim: To report the clinical and therapeutic particularities of pediatric keratoconus (KC).
Methods: Retrospective study focusing on patients aged less than 18 years, presenting with KC and followed in a tertiary reference center in Sfax, Tunisia.
Results: Our study involved 38 eyes of 20 children.
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