Transmittance properties of contact lens multipurpose solutions and their effects on a hydrogel lens


Autoria(s): Ogbuehi, Kelechi; Khan, Faisal M.J.; Alanazi, Saud A.; AlMubrad, Turki M.; Osuagwu, Uchechukwu L.
Data(s)

01/08/2014

Resumo

Purpose The aim was to assess the compatibility of different multipurpose solutions (MPSs) with one type of silicone hydrogel (SiH) contact lens by, assessing the changes in both ultraviolet (UV) and visible light transmissibility of the hydrogel lens caused by the MPSs. Methods The light transmittance from 200-700 nm were measured for the lotrafilcon B blister pack solution (BPS), six MPSs namely, ReNuMultiPlus Multi-Purpose Solution (Bausch and Lomb Inc., Rochester NY, USA.); Complete RevitaLens Multi-Purpose (Abbott Medical Optics Inc., Quarryvale Co. Dublin, Ireland); All In One Light (Sauflon Pharmaceuticals Ltd., Twickenham, England); SOLO-care AQUA™ (Ciba Vision Corporation Duluth, Georgia, USA.); Biomedics All-in-one solution (CooperVision, Hamble, UK); and HippiaMultiPlus All-in-one solution (Interojo Inc., Kyeonggi-do, Korea), and a lotrafilcon B SiH lens (before and after storage), using a spectrophotometer. Results The UV transmitted through the BPS and the MPS were similar (p >.05, for all), except for the HippiaMultiPlus which was lower (p < 0.001) by 19.8%. Mean transparency values were statistically (p<.001) significantly different between the BPS and the MPSs. All MP solution/SiH lens combinations resulted in relatively high UV transmittance values especially in the UVC spectrum, and significantly increased (p <.001) the visible light transmittance values of the SiH lens. Greater changes in transparency were observed in the ReNu/SiH lens (28.5%) and the Complete RevitaLens/SiH lens (24.9%) combinations. Conclusion The six MPSs showed significant variations in the transmitted UV and visible light. Similar to the BPS, all MPSs were equally transparent, but showed very poor UVA & UVB attenuation, except for the Hippia MultiPlus. The MPS/SiH lens combinations did not significantly affect the lens transparency but it significant increased the lens transmittance of UV radiation, after storage. Further in-vivo studies are needed to validate if this effect is constant.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81746/

Publicador

ScienceDomain International

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/81746/3/81746.pdf

DOI:10.9734/ARRB/2014/7934

Ogbuehi, Kelechi, Khan, Faisal M.J., Alanazi, Saud A., AlMubrad, Turki M., & Osuagwu, Uchechukwu L. (2014) Transmittance properties of contact lens multipurpose solutions and their effects on a hydrogel lens. Annual Research & Review in Biology, 4(15), pp. 2484-2500.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 Ogbuehi et al.;

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Fonte

Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation; School of Optometry & Vision Science

Palavras-Chave #111302 Optical Technology #anzsrc Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Class #Contact lens #Multipurpose Solution (MPS) #Blister Pack Solution #ultraviolet #electromagnetic spectrum #light transmission
Tipo

Journal Article