Ocular Effects of Hard Gas-Permeable-Lens Extended Wear

Abstract
Thirty-five myopic subjects were fitted with rigid gas-permeable lenses for 6 months of extended wear (EW). These lenses had an average oxygen transmissibility of 37 x 10(-9) (cm x ml x O2)/(s x ml x mm Hg). For six monthly morning visits subjects reported with one eye patched; corneal thickness, corneal curvature, refractive error, endothelial photomicroscopy, and slitlamp examinations were done on both eyes. The average morning corneal swelling was 5.9 +/- 3.3%. Corneal curvature showed 0.24 +/- 0.44 D flattening in the steep meridian and 0.20 D steepening in the flat meridian. Spectacle refraction and corrected visual acuity changes were small in the spherical and cylindrical components. Complications that were important clinically included 10% lens adherence syndrome, 20% superficial limbal keratitis, 6.5% epithelial microcysts, and some increase in endothelial polymegathism. No infections, red eye responses, or infiltrative keratitis were observed during the 6-month follow-up period. These results suggest that hard-lens EW is feasible and that lenses with this Dk/L value will meet oxygen requirements for many patients; however, some patients will require lenses of higher oxygen transmissibility to avoid undesirable complications.

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