Contacts you can wear for a month

Contacts you can wear for a month


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A new generation of recently approved contact lenses offer such a dramatic improvement in comfort, convenience and safety that some people are forgoing the popular laser eye surgery to


correct their vision. Thanks to significant breakthroughs in lens materials, consumers can now safely wear contacts around-the-clock for up to 30 days, without the hassle of taking the


lenses out at night, cleaning them and putting them back in the morning. And the new lenses have been shown to be safer to wear for extended periods than competing types of lenses worn for


less time, according to several eye doctors who have tested them in clinical trials. “It’s like the difference between DVDs and videos,” said Dr. Dwight Cavanagh, vice chairman of


ophthalmology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. “Once you’ve seen a DVD, you don’t buy any more videos.” The new products are CIBA Vision’s Focus Night &


Day soft lenses and Menicon Co.’s Menicon Z rigid gas permeable lenses. The Food and Drug Administration approved the products for 30-day wear in the United States during the past year, but


the new lenses have been slow to catch on with consumers and doctors. Many eye doctors are not yet familiar with the products, and some believe that existing contacts are safe enough. But


eye-care professionals say they expect public awareness to grow. Some eye doctors recommend the lenses as an alternative for consumers who are considering Lasik eye surgery, a popular


vision-correction technique used to treat nearsightedness. Although many Americans have had Lasik surgery, some people have been reluctant to undergo the costly procedure because of concern


about possible complications. The procedure carries a very low risk of serious complications, such as blindness, but a somewhat higher rate of less severe complications, such as dry eyes or


glare. Many people are wary of taking any risk when it comes to their eyesight. The new lenses allow at least double -- and in many cases, six to eight times -- as much oxygen to nourish the


cornea as the various brands now on the market. Inadequate oxygen for the eyes is believed to have been a chief cause of earlier problems with continuous-wear lenses that led to


sight-threatening infections and corneal ulcerations. After approving some contacts for 30-day “continuous wear” in the 1970s, the FDA in 1989 set tighter restrictions on the lenses,


allowing a maximum “extended wear” time of just seven days. The new lenses, which sell for between $200 and $500, including fittings, are made of plastics that allow the eyes to breathe


“just like lungs do,” says Mary Jo Stiegemeier, a Beachwood, Ohio, optometrist who participated in the FDA trials of Menicon Z lenses. She was initially apprehensive about allowing her


patients to sleep with their lenses on for weeks on end. After a month of continuous wear, however, their corneas looked “like they’d never worn a contact lens”--a significant improvement


from the aftermath of wearing other kinds of lenses for less time, she said. The new lenses also significantly minimize the adherence of bacteria. The lens surface is more natural and “bio


harmonious with the molecules of the body, which is extremely important, said Joseph Barr, a professor of optometry at Ohio State University and editor of Contact Lens Spectrum, a medical


journal. “The patients and the practitioners, and I don’t mean to demean them, really don’t comprehend the significance of this technological breakthrough,” he says. “In the past 20 years ,


we’ve been trying to make lenses like this--with all that oxygen--that are comfortable, wettable and bio-compatible.” The two lenses are made from different materials and function


differently. Menicon’s lens, which is thin and bendable but still considered “rigid,” is a copolymer of the materials siloxanylstyrene and fluoro-methacrylate, touted as strong yet porous.


To demonstrate to visiting doctors how much oxygen it allows to reach the eye, Menicon covered a fish tank with its polymer material. The fish, which need oxygen to survive, continued to


swim without problem, meaning enough air was passing through the polymer to allow them to breathe. CIBA Vision’s soft, rubbery Focus Night & Day lens are made of silicone hydrogel. The


FDA also approved a similar soft lens made by Bausch & Lomb, but CIBA Vision, sued for patent infringement, successfully blocking Bausch from selling its “Pure Vision” lenses in the U.S.


However, Baush is appealing the decision and continues to market them internationally. Still, convincing consumers that the new lenses are safe to wear for a month may be an uphill battle,


considering the bad publicity that the first generation of continuous-wear lenses received in the 1980s, when some patients suffered severe corneal infections. The problems gave rise to


disposable contact lenses, used for one day and then discarded, such as Accuvue. With disposable lenses, “You don’t have to worry about cleaning them, and if you’re traveling and something


happens, you just throw the lens away and put another one in,” says spokeswoman Kristie Madara of the Atlanta-based CIBA Vision, which makes Focus Dailies as well as the new Focus Night


& Day variety.Nevertheless, consumers generally aren’t aware of how much difference there is between brands of lenses -- even those in the same general category such as soft or rigid gas


permeable lenses. Menicon faces a particular challenge because about 85% of Americans who wear contact lenses have soft lenses, which are more comfortable initially. Indeed, relatively few


eye doctors fit the gas permeables. “Optometrists take the easy way out,” says Barr, who is an optometrist, “because soft lenses require less time to fit and adjust.” Yet for those with


adequate tear production, gas permeable would be the lens of choice, many doctors said, because the lenses move on the eye better, promote better tear flow, correct astigmatism and provide


better visual acuity. “A well-adapted rigid gas permeable lens wearer will never switch to soft” because their vision is sharper and clearer, Cavanagh said. “But you’ve got to build up your


wearing time and get used to them, and you can’t slack off, whereas the soft you can pop in at any time, but you don’t see as well.” Robert Buffington, a Sacramento optometrist, said he has


fitted 15,000 patients with the Menicon Z lenses since the FDA approved their use for seven-day continuous wear in July 2000. He calls them “probably the safest contact lens I’ve ever seen


in my life.” Brian Craven, 41, of New Orleans, had been seriously contemplating Lasik surgery. While researching the procedure on the Internet, he stumbled on information about Menicon Z and


has been wearing the lenses since. “I have such a terrific correction and all the benefits of Lasik, such as being able to read the alarm clock at night and practically no lens care


regimen, without the risk of a poor outcome with Lasik or the unknown long-term effects of this surgery,” Craven said. MORE TO READ