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Investigating the utility of clinical assessments to predict success with presbyopic contact lens correction.

Authors :
Sivardeen A
Laughton D
Wolffsohn JS
Source :
Contact lens & anterior eye : the journal of the British Contact Lens Association [Cont Lens Anterior Eye] 2016 Oct; Vol. 39 (5), pp. 322-30. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 May 26.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Purpose: To determine the utility of a range of clinical and non-clinical indicators to aid the initial selection of the optimum presbyopic contact lens. In addition, to assess whether lens preference was influenced by the visual performance compared to the other designs trialled (intra-subject) or compared to participants who preferred other designs (inter-subject).<br />Methods: A double-masked randomised crossover trial of Air Optix Aqua multifocal, PureVision 2 for Presbyopia, Acuvue OASYS for Presbyopia, Biofinity multifocal and monovision was conducted on 35 presbyopes (54.3±6.2years). Participant lifestyle, personality, pupil characteristics and aberrometry were assessed prior to lens fitting. After 4 weeks of wear, high and low contrast visual acuity (VA) under photopic and mesopic conditions, reading speed, Near Activity Visual Questionnaire (NAVQ) rating, subjective quality-of-vision scoring, defocus curves, stereopsis, halometry, aberrometry and ocular physiology were quantified.<br />Results: After trialling all the lenses, preference was mixed (n=12 Biofinity, n=10 monovision, n=7 Purevision, n=4 Air Optix Aqua, n=2 Oasys). Lens preference was not dependent on personality (F=1.182, p=0.323) or the hours spent working at near (p=0.535) or intermediate (p=0.759) distances. No intersubject or strong intrasubject relationships emerged between lens preference and reading speed, NAVQ rating, halo size, aberrometry or ocular physiology (p>0.05).<br />Conclusions: Participant lifestyle and personality, ocular optics, contact lens visual performance and ocular physiology provided poor indicators of the preferred lens type after 4 weeks of wear. This is confounded by the wide range of task visual demands of presbyopes and the limited optical differences between current multifocal contact lens designs.<br /> (Copyright © 2016 British Contact Lens Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-5411
Volume :
39
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Contact lens & anterior eye : the journal of the British Contact Lens Association
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27237964
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clae.2016.05.002