| Guidelines For Choosing Your Contacts |
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There are some risks of infection with contact, but if you clean them properly and use them as directed that is cut to the bare minimum. There are a few contact types to choose from and some even come in neat colors or funky designs. Contacts come in two different types hard, also known as rigid gas permeable, or soft lenses. Soft contact lenses are used by more than 80% of the contact wearers today. These are made by an extremely thin polymer-plastic that completely conforms to the shape of your eye. Most consist of between 25-79% water and accounts for the wetness on the lens. It is the wetness that makes it so much more comfortable to wear. These extremely flexible lenses are more comfortable from the first day of use and stay in better than hard lenses. Rigid gas-permeable or hard contact lenses are made of a much harder plastic that feels like glass to the user. They also don’t contain any water so dry eyes might be a problem for some who are predisposed to allergies or have tear production issues. Even though they have much less flexibility than the soft lenses but do allow oxygen to reach the cornea much more effectively. They are also used to treat many various eye problems like distorted corneal shape and astigmatism, and even some forms of mild corneal scars. They might take some time to adjust to, but are very comfortable after that. Hard lenses are easier to take care of and less likely to rip. They also are not to prone to as many infections as soft lenses. The only disadvantage is that they can sleep of the eye easier than soft lenses. The biggest thing to remember with this type of lens is you must remember to wear then everyday or you will have to go through another adjustment period. If you have a problem with focusing on objects that are up close, presbyopic, you can special lenses to correct this as well. Manumission is another option for people with presbyopic. This uses one lens for reading in one eye and the distance prescription in the other eye. You would wear the distance lens in your dominant eye and the other in your weaker eye. This is comfortable and easy to adjust to for most people. Other types of corrective contact lenses include: Bifocal lenses can be gotten in soft or hard lenses and are used to correct distance vision and near vision at different times of use. There are three different types of bifocal lens. Simultaneous vision has both the near and far prescriptions on the pupil portion of the lens. Your brain learns to figure out which prescriptions to use depending on what distance you are looking at. The concentric design uses the outside of the lens to see near and the center of the lens to see far. The alternating lenses works like the glasses version, the top is used for seeing far and the bottom for seeing up close up. Modified manumission is when you where a bi or multi-focal lens in one eye and a single-vision lens in the other eye. Both eyes can be used for distance but only one for reading. You can also have the opposite where one is for distance and you can use both for reading. The later option is better if you do a lot of reading or are on the computer a lot. |