Retardation of Myopia Progression by Multifocal Soft Contact Lenses

Myopia is an important public health problem due to its prevalence and significant public health cost. Elevating levels of myopia increase the risk of vision impairment, and therefore, high myopia has become one of the main causes of untreatable vision loss throughout the world due to its irreversib...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of medical sciences 2019, Vol.16 (2), p.198-202
Hauptverfasser: Zhu, Qin, Liu, Yongsong, Tighe, Sean, Zhu, Yingting, Su, Xuanbo, Lu, Fabing, Hu, Min
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container_end_page 202
container_issue 2
container_start_page 198
container_title International journal of medical sciences
container_volume 16
creator Zhu, Qin
Liu, Yongsong
Tighe, Sean
Zhu, Yingting
Su, Xuanbo
Lu, Fabing
Hu, Min
description Myopia is an important public health problem due to its prevalence and significant public health cost. Elevating levels of myopia increase the risk of vision impairment, and therefore, high myopia has become one of the main causes of untreatable vision loss throughout the world due to its irreversible complications. At present, many options for slowing progression of myopia have already been proposed and evaluated such as progressive addition of executive bifocal spectacle lenses, peripheral defocusing lenses, overnight orthokeratology, pharmacological agents such as atropine eye drops, and multifocal soft contact lenses (MFSCLs). Use of MFSCLs has especially increased in recent years due to the growing demand to slow myopia progression during patient's adolescent growth period to avoid pathological myopia in adulthood. Compared with the other traditional methods of controlling myopia, MFSCLs allow myopic patients to better maintain their clear visual quality and slow myopia progression. In this manuscript, we aim to review the basics of myopia, recent advances in contact lenses to control myopia with emphasis on MFSCLs, define the elements for proper MFSCL fittings (such as pupil size, aberrations, accommodation and centering), discuss the potential rebound effect after discontinuation of contact lenses, and future directions for improvements of contact lenses for the control of myopia.
doi_str_mv 10.7150/ijms.30118
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title Retardation of Myopia Progression by Multifocal Soft Contact Lenses
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