Has anyone else read this study Rebecca recently posted?
http://dryeyedigest.blogspot.com/200...-wear-and.html
I just did and found it incredibly interesting. I wore contacts for 10 years with really no breaks. I didn't take very good care of my contacts for about the first 5 years. I spent the last 2.5 years glued to a computer for 8+ hours a day Monday through Friday for my job.
I've now not been able to wear contacts for over 8 months and only recently have my eyes been showing some progress in not feeling dry, painful, etc. In researching how to fix my eyes, I found questioning directed at the long-term results of contact usage but no real conclusive studies. Until this.
It really intrigues me because I've always had some eye dryness. I always dealt with it because I hated glasses. The eye doctor that I saw when my eyes got bad last year told me that my mucous layer wasn't working right, which in turn caused my tears and oily layer to not work either.
This study suggests to me that perhaps those years of contact lens wear set off a chain reaction beginning with the oily layer and ending with the mucous layer. And the high computer usage just added to the contacts' damage. Now that I'm working on the environmental issues affecting my eyes and have not worn contacts for this long, I wonder if my eyes are finally starting to heal from those 10 years of contacts wear...
Just wanted to share my thoughts.
http://dryeyedigest.blogspot.com/200...-wear-and.html
I just did and found it incredibly interesting. I wore contacts for 10 years with really no breaks. I didn't take very good care of my contacts for about the first 5 years. I spent the last 2.5 years glued to a computer for 8+ hours a day Monday through Friday for my job.
I've now not been able to wear contacts for over 8 months and only recently have my eyes been showing some progress in not feeling dry, painful, etc. In researching how to fix my eyes, I found questioning directed at the long-term results of contact usage but no real conclusive studies. Until this.
It really intrigues me because I've always had some eye dryness. I always dealt with it because I hated glasses. The eye doctor that I saw when my eyes got bad last year told me that my mucous layer wasn't working right, which in turn caused my tears and oily layer to not work either.
This study suggests to me that perhaps those years of contact lens wear set off a chain reaction beginning with the oily layer and ending with the mucous layer. And the high computer usage just added to the contacts' damage. Now that I'm working on the environmental issues affecting my eyes and have not worn contacts for this long, I wonder if my eyes are finally starting to heal from those 10 years of contacts wear...
Just wanted to share my thoughts.
Comment