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The objective of this study is to determine how neurolens® influences contact lens discomfort in uncomfortable myopic soft contact lenses wearers. It is hypothesized that uncomfortable soft contact lens wearers are experiencing some level of discomfort associated with increased vergence demand when looking at near targets and will experience discomfort relief when wearing neurolens® over their habitual soft contact lenses. Uncomfortable, myopic soft contact lens wearers will be recruited. Each participant will be masked and randomly assigned a placebo pair of spectacles or a neurolens® spectacle pair for approximately one month. A prospective, randomized clinical trial will be performed. Participants and investigators will be masked to the treatment.
Full description
Discomfort is the primary reason for contact lens dissatisfaction and discontinuation. Symptoms of contact lens discomfort are often attributed to dryness; however, severity of dry eye and discomfort symptoms is not correlated with clinical dry eye severity. When clinical signs of contact lens discomfort and dryness misalign with symptom severity, the possibility of an under-recognized etiology must be considered.
Symptoms associated with contact lens discomfort are similar to symptoms reported with binocular vision disorders and accommodative and vergence strain. Eyestrain, fatigue, and increased/more frequent end-of-day symptoms are noted by patients in both groups of conditions. It has been reported that uncomfortable contact lens wearers have an unusually high prevalence of binocular vision disorders and clinical signs. Basic optical calculations show that myopes must converge and accommodate more when corrected with contact lenses versus spectacles, so it is reasonable to hypothesize that a myopic contact lens wearer may experience eyestrain and discomfort associated with vergence fatigue while wearing contact lenses, but not while wearing single vision spectacles.
neurolens® is a type of spectacle lens that uses contoured prism to alleviate vergence demands and fatigue at near and, therefore, encourages comfortable vision. This spectacle design uses the neurolens® Measurement Device (nMD) to measure eye alignment and determine the spectacle lenses that are uniquely designed for each wearer. Acknowledging that some amount of contact lens discomfort may be caused by vergence fatigue, it is possible that uncomfortable contact lens wearers who wear neurolens® over their contact lenses will achieve discomfort relief.
The objective of this study is to determine how neurolens® influences contact lens discomfort in uncomfortable myopic soft contact lenses wearers. Investigators hypothesize that uncomfortable soft contact lens wearers are experiencing some level of discomfort associated with increased vergence demand when looking at near targets and will experience discomfort relief when wearing neurolens® over their habitual soft contact lenses. Uncomfortable, myopic soft contact lens wearers will be recruited. Each participant will be masked and randomly assigned a placebo pair of spectacles or a neurolens® spectacle pair for approximately one month. A prospective, randomized clinical trial will be performed. Participants and investigators will be masked to the treatment.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Uncomfortable soft contact lens wearers (CLDEQ-8 ≥ 17 points)
Adult, pre-presbyopic age range (18 - 35 years)
Visual acuity of 20/25 or better in each eye with habitual contact lenses
Soft, spherical or low toric, single vision soft contact lens wearer:
No significant subjective over-refraction in either eye with habitual soft contact lenses
Valid measurement on the neurolens® Measurement Device (nMD2)
Exclusion criteria
History of ocular surgery
History of ocular disease, amblyopia, strabismus, or vision therapy
History of neurolens or prism spectacle correction
History of significant vertical phoria or vertical phoria correction
Current ocular medication use
Significant signs of dry eye:
Signs of inappropriate fit or surface of soft contact lenses
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Erin Rueff, OD, PhD; Vivek Labhishetty, BSOpt, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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