Efficacy of a gas permeable contact lens to induce peripheral myopic defocus


Autoria(s): Pauné, Jaume; Queirós, A.; Ferreira, Daniela Lopes; Ribeiro, Miguel António Faria; Quevedo, L.; González-Méijome, José Manuel
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Purpose. The purpose of this work was to evaluate the potential of a novel custom-designed rigid gas permeable (RGP) contact lens to modify the relative peripheral refractive error in a sample of myopic patients. Methods. Fifty-two right eyes of 52 myopic patients (mean [TSD] age, 21 [T2] years) with spherical refractive errors ranging from j0.75 to j8.00 diopters (D) and refractive astigmatism of 1.00 D or less were fitted with a novel experimental RGP (ExpRGP) lens designed to create myopic defocus in the peripheral retina. A standard RGP (StdRGP) lens was used as a control in the same eye. The relative peripheral refractive error was measured without the lens and with each of two lenses (StdRGP and ExpRGP) using an open-field autorefractometer from 30 degrees nasal to 30 degrees temporal, in 5-degree steps. The effectiveness of the lens design was evaluated as the amount of relative peripheral refractive error difference induced by the ExpRGP compared with no lens and with StdRGP conditions at 30 degrees in the nasal and temporal (averaged) peripheral visual fields. Results. Experimental RGP lens induced a significant change in relative peripheral refractive error compared with the nolens condition (baseline), beyond the 10 degrees of eccentricity to the nasal and temporal side of the visual field (p G 0.05). The maximum effect was achieved at 30 degrees. Wearing the ExpRGP lens, 60% of the eyes had peripheral myopia exceeding j1.00 D, whereas none of the eyes presented with this feature at baseline. There was no significant correlation (r = 0.04; p = 0.756) between the degree of myopia induced at 30 degrees of eccentricity of the visual field with the ExpRGP lens and the baseline refractive error. Conclusions. Custom-designed RGP contact lenses can generate a significant degree of relative peripheral myopia in myopic patients regardless of their baselin spherical equivalent refractive error.

Jaume Paune´ has proprietary and financial interests in the manufacturing and distribution of lenses evaluated in this study. The remaining authors declare that they do not have any proprietary or financial interest in any of the materials mentioned in this article. This work was partially funded by Fundação para Ciência e Tecnologia, Portugal, Projects: PTDC/SAU-BEB/ 098392/2008 and PTDC/SAU-BEB/098391/2008

Identificador

Pauné, Jaume; Queiros, Antonio; Lopes-Ferreira, Daniela; Faria-Ribeiro, Miguel; Quevedo, Lluisa; Gonzalez-Meijome, Jose Manuel. Efficacy of a Gas Permeable Contact Lens to Induce Peripheral Myopic Defocus, Optometry and Vision Science, 92, 5, 596-603, 2015.

1040-5488

http://hdl.handle.net/1822/39500

1040-5488/15/9205-0000/0

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Academy of Optometry

Relação

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/5876-PPCDTI/98392/PT

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/FCT/5876-PPCDTI/98391/PT

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Myopia progression #Gas permeable contact lens #Peripheral refraction
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article