Was wondering whether anyone has tried a regimen that alternates different artificial tear products over the course of the day in order to ensure the application of a particular set of ingredients not present in any single product. . .
For example:
Bion Tears and Thera Tears PF appear to be the only PF drops that include sodium bicarbonate, which has been associated with corneal healing. . .
Systane PF and Bion Tears appear to be the only PF drops that include zinc chloride, also associated with corneal healing. . .
Systane has the guar gum that is touted for its ability to hold corneal tissue together in a matrix, to promote healing. . .(Dr. Holly's drops have a similar property, I think, but are not yet available in PF.)
Thera Tears appears to be the only hypotonic product that can be gotten in preservative-free vials. . .(Dr. Holly's drops and HypoTears are also hypotonic, but not or no longer available in PF.)
I've seen some writing about using the right combo. of these, spacing applications of different brand drops by about 5 minutes, for each combo. dose. . .
It looks like Systane PF and Thera Tears PF would be the least common dominator, in this analysis. . .and I'm thinking that since the Liquid Gel version of Thera Tears is touted as holding the "tear replication" ingredients of that product on the eye, one could get away with using a little less of the Liquid Gel version than of the original Thera Tears (which is supposed to be used with saturation dosing), and still achieve the intended chemistry. . .
Anyway, even if bicarb, zinc, the matrix effect, and hypotonicity are not the elements one should look for, (with other components and properties being more important), I'm interested in whether anyone has ever tried combining drops methodically, this way, and whether results were good. . .
For example:
Bion Tears and Thera Tears PF appear to be the only PF drops that include sodium bicarbonate, which has been associated with corneal healing. . .
Systane PF and Bion Tears appear to be the only PF drops that include zinc chloride, also associated with corneal healing. . .
Systane has the guar gum that is touted for its ability to hold corneal tissue together in a matrix, to promote healing. . .(Dr. Holly's drops have a similar property, I think, but are not yet available in PF.)
Thera Tears appears to be the only hypotonic product that can be gotten in preservative-free vials. . .(Dr. Holly's drops and HypoTears are also hypotonic, but not or no longer available in PF.)
I've seen some writing about using the right combo. of these, spacing applications of different brand drops by about 5 minutes, for each combo. dose. . .
It looks like Systane PF and Thera Tears PF would be the least common dominator, in this analysis. . .and I'm thinking that since the Liquid Gel version of Thera Tears is touted as holding the "tear replication" ingredients of that product on the eye, one could get away with using a little less of the Liquid Gel version than of the original Thera Tears (which is supposed to be used with saturation dosing), and still achieve the intended chemistry. . .
Anyway, even if bicarb, zinc, the matrix effect, and hypotonicity are not the elements one should look for, (with other components and properties being more important), I'm interested in whether anyone has ever tried combining drops methodically, this way, and whether results were good. . .
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