Researchers did vision exams on 30 people wearing clear lenses and
then repeated the tests with colored versions that left varying
amounts of untinted open space around the pupil, a region known as
the optical zone.
The smaller the clear optical zone got on the colored lenses, the
harder it was for people to see well, the study found. Objects at a
distance got a bit blurrier, and participants also lost some ability
detect contrast needed to spot dark things at night or pale items
against a light background.
“For the most part, if you are going to wear colored contacts for a
few hours on Halloween, the likelihood of a problem is very small,”
said Dr. Oliver Schein, an ophthalmology researcher at the Johns
Hopkins Wilmer Eye Institute in Baltimore who wasn’t involved in the
study.
The trouble comes when people buy this costume accessory without
seeing an eye care professional, said Dr. Edward Manche, director of
cornea and refractive surgery at Stanford Health Care in California.
“Many if not most of the people wearing the lenses obtain them over
the counter, online or borrow them from friends,” Manche, who wasn’t
involved in the study, said by email. “This often leads to poorly
fitting lenses as well as use by people with no instruction on the
care and wearing of lenses.”
In the study by Tae-im Kim of Yonsei University College of Medicine
in South Korea, and colleagues, participants tried out lenses with
three different clear optical zone diameters – 4, 5, and 6
millimeters.
They found just a millimeter could mean the difference between
normal vision and the development of slight changes in sight.
While the study, published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology,
is small and additional research is needed to more firmly establish
the connection between the clear optical zone diameter and any
vision problems, the researchers recommend a minimum pigment-free
zone of 6 millimeters.
The study found only a small change in vision even with a
4-millimeter optical zone, noted Dr. John Clements, a researcher at
the Casey Eye Institute at Oregon Health and Science University in
Portland.
[to top of second column] |
"If prescribed by an eye care professional and used as directed,
most of these lenses are relatively harmless,” Clements, who wasn’t
involved in the study, said by email. “The most devastating damage
occurs when someone gets these lenses over-the-counter for cosmetic
use and abuses the lens. This behavior can lead to severe eye
infections that may cause blindness.”
The trouble, for example, with a vampire red lens for Halloween, is
that contacts bought at the costume shop may carry an increased risk
of infections or scratches on the eye surface because they may not
fit properly or be made with safe materials, said Dr. Thomas
Steinemann, an eye disease researcher at Case Western Reserve
University and spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmology.
“People who wear costume contacts or colored contacts that they find
at the dollar store or the flea market usually end up in my office
needing treatment of some kind,” Steinemann, who wasn’t involved in
the study, said by email. “I see patients all the time who come in
who may wear colored lenses and they talk about how they’re not
comfortable and they can’t always see well.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1WlnDPJ The British Journal of Ophthalmology,
online September 16, 2015.
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|