Thank you, Dr. Gemoules, for the enormously valuable guidance you provide. . .
Regarding the absence of good science to prove a connection between prolonged contact lens wear and dry eye, I wonder if the following has been explored:
All the while corneal desensitization due to lens wear is likely to reverse after lens wear is discontinued, such that lens wear, and resulting desensitization are not logical DIRECT causes of ocular surface disease, is it possible that even a TEMPORARY period of corneal desensitization is enough to slow down blink reflex, in turn disturbing secretions triggered by the blink (i.e. meibomian and tear gland secretions), and also leading, in some cases, to gland atrophy?
I ask because a wonderful ophthalmologist I used to see had a number of post-LASIK patients, and he shared with me his strong belief that the temporary desensitization of the cornea caused by the nerve cutting performed in LASIK ruined people's blink patterns. He believed that if the blink was abnormal for long enough, meibomian glands could atrophy from lack of stimulation. . .It's my impression that someone has done research on the relationship between corneal desensitization and the blink reflex, but I don't know more about it.
I wore contacts for decades, forced by parents who were obsessed by appearance. The lenses always hurt, and I got corneal abrasions often. Ultimately, a few years after I stopped wearing the lenses completely, I developed endstage MGD (with gland dropout and Zero-second TBUT). I have to wonder whether I basically killed my meibomians by not blinking normally for many, many years.
Regarding the absence of good science to prove a connection between prolonged contact lens wear and dry eye, I wonder if the following has been explored:
All the while corneal desensitization due to lens wear is likely to reverse after lens wear is discontinued, such that lens wear, and resulting desensitization are not logical DIRECT causes of ocular surface disease, is it possible that even a TEMPORARY period of corneal desensitization is enough to slow down blink reflex, in turn disturbing secretions triggered by the blink (i.e. meibomian and tear gland secretions), and also leading, in some cases, to gland atrophy?
I ask because a wonderful ophthalmologist I used to see had a number of post-LASIK patients, and he shared with me his strong belief that the temporary desensitization of the cornea caused by the nerve cutting performed in LASIK ruined people's blink patterns. He believed that if the blink was abnormal for long enough, meibomian glands could atrophy from lack of stimulation. . .It's my impression that someone has done research on the relationship between corneal desensitization and the blink reflex, but I don't know more about it.
I wore contacts for decades, forced by parents who were obsessed by appearance. The lenses always hurt, and I got corneal abrasions often. Ultimately, a few years after I stopped wearing the lenses completely, I developed endstage MGD (with gland dropout and Zero-second TBUT). I have to wonder whether I basically killed my meibomians by not blinking normally for many, many years.
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