Home »  News  »  Hard contact lenses slow myopia

Hard contact lenses slow myopia

Hard contact lenses are associated with a slower rate of progression of myopia in children compared with soft contact lenses.

Advertisement
Hard contact lenses are associated with a slower rate of progression of myopia in children compared with soft contact lenses. This effect, however, seems to be related to transient changes in the curvature of the cornea, suggesting that the benefit will not be sustained over time. Researchers from the Ohio State University College of Optometry, USA, began the study thinking that the changes induced by the hard lenses could be permanent. There have been a few studies indicating they would lead to permanent change and a couple that indicated they would not. To further investigate, they enrolled 116 children between the ages of 8 and 11 years. Fifty-nine children were randomly assigned to rigid lenses and 57 to soft lenses. Over the next three years, the change in refractive error averaged -1.56 diopters in the rigid lenses group and -2.19 diopters in the soft lenses group. The changes appeared to be due to corneal steepening, which was greater in the soft lenses group. The results were not affected by subject age or baseline myopia. Doctors can advise their patients that hard contact lenses may slow myopia progression slightly but it's not going to have a profound effect, the researchers concluded. The study also showed that children as young as 8 years old do well with contact lenses and can care for them themselves
Archives of Ophthalmology,
December 2004

DoctorNDTV is the one stop site for all your health needs providing the most credible health information, health news and tips with expert advice on healthy living, diet plans, informative videos etc. You can get the most relevant and accurate info you need about health problems like diabetes, cancer, pregnancy, HIV and AIDS, weight loss and many other lifestyle diseases. We have a panel of over 350 experts who help us develop content by giving their valuable inputs and bringing to us the latest in the world of healthcare.

Advertisement