Contact lenses > Acuvue Contact Lenses - Bringing Out The Best In Your Eyes!

Acuvue Contact Lenses - Bringing Out The Best In Your Eyes!

Contact lenses are small, optical, often soft, and remarkably thin lenses placed in the cornea of one's eye. They improve the vision, and sometimes the physical appearance, of eyes. Contact lenses are usually an alternative to traditional eyeglasses, correcting a person's vision without requiring them to wear ugly, awkward bifocals. However some people with naturally good eyesight still wear contacts, solely for cosmetic reasons - to enhance or change the color of their eye.


Unlike eyeglasses, contact lenses are not easily affected by weather, are not especially fragile, and actually (in most cases) do a better job at improving a person's eyesight.

Not to mention, a glasses' framing immediately hinders a person's field of vision! This is not so with contact lenses that fit directly onto the eyeball and are practically invisible.

For those ready to scrap conventional, unfashionable eyeglasses, local eye care professionals will prescribe a brand of contact lenses to vision care patients and direct them to the appropriate retailer. Acuvue Contact Lenses is the most popular brand around. Acuvue Contact Lenses provides general vision lenses, color contact lenses (with 10 different shades), and astigmatism and multifocal lenses. Acuvue Contact Lenses has also followed a recent trend of extended wear lenses.

Generally, lenses are removed from the eye and set in a cleansing solution overnight, but other kinds of lenses are safe to wear for longer than 12 hours. Extended wear lenses are literally discarded after a certain length of time and replaced by another set..

Jocelyn Meadows researches the net for information on various topics, including contact lenses. Read more of her articles on this topic including: cosmetic colored contacts and special effect colored contacts.

Contacts Provide Diverse and Plentiful Choices

Whether you're wearing contact lenses for the first time or you're a current wearer seeking a new option, the choices have never been so diverse and plentiful.

The technology and designs available will make you're contact lenses wearing experience a comfortable and convenient one. Some of the wonderful contact lens types include; disposable contact lenses, colored contact lenses, rigid gas permeable (RGP) lenses, toric and bifocal lenses and extended wear lenses.

The first step for anyone wanting to wear contact lenses is a visit to an eyecare practitioner, even if you just want to change eye color. Ophthalmologists, optometrists and in some states opticians are considered to be eyecare practitioners and can write a valid contact lenses prescription. In the United States contact lenses can only be legally purchased with a written contact lens prescription.

You're eyecare practitioner will first check to see if you can safely wear contact...

Contacts Provide Diverse and Plentiful Choices
Contact lenses > Contacts Provide Diverse and Plentiful Choices

Bifocal Contact Lenses for Presbyopia

Presbyopia is a vision condition in which they eyes are not able to focus clearly on near objects. It usually begins after the age of about forty when the lenses in the eye start reducing in flexibility. Presbyopia affects around 90 million adults in the USA alone and about one in four patients passing through an optometrist's door will suffer from it.

Symptoms of presbyopia include difficulty in reading, difficulty in seeing in low lighting conditions and, occasionally, headaches.

Traditionally these vision problems were addressed with the old-fashioned reading glasses. Or existing eyeglass wearers could opt for bifocal eyeglasses. However the use of modern contact lenses for use with presbyopia has some distinct advantages beyond their cosmetic appeal.

For example they can be well suited to other aspects of a wearer's lifestyle such as sporting activities, exercising or using a computer.

Recently, contact lenses for correcting presbyopia...

Bifocal Contact Lenses for Presbyopia
Contact lenses > Bifocal Contact Lenses for Presbyopia

Contact Lenses




Anyone that has vision impairment, wears eyeglasses, has eye problems related to genetic or degenerative eyesight, the resolution for many, by wearing contact lenses. In the United States, 29 Million people wear contact lenses (The Physician's Guide to Eye Care - 2001). Contact lenses or corrective lens are placed on the cornea of the eye. Specialty contact lenses are available in different colors, which can give the person a different look or appearance. Other advantages for contact lenses: No frames to obstruct any view, lenses reduce distortions, lenses do not fog up like glasses, and no rain spots appear.

Majority of people can wear contact lenses (80 percent soft lenses), except for some people, that are more likely to develop eye infection, or more sensitive to have a bad reaction. Also, anyone that has diabetes, asthma, dry eyes or plays water sports.




An Optometrist or ophthalmologist can determine if...

Contact Lenses
Contact lenses > Contact Lenses

Contact Lenses and Dry Eyes

Contact Lenses and Dry EyesBy
Until recently, contact lenses and dry eyes seemed to come hand in hand. Modern technology, however, has developed several ways for contact lens wearers to deal with dry eyes. When eyes become dry, they can be irritable, bloodshot and in severe cases, vision can become impaired. What Causes Dry Eyes?Dry eyes occur for a number of reasons, although there is thought to be a particular link between extended contact lenses and dry eyes. Dry eyes are also prevalent with older contact lens wearers as tear ducts become less effective with age.

Problems with contact lenses and dry eyes become exacerbated when wearers spend a considerable length of time in front of a computer screen or in an air-conditioned environment.Specific Contact Lenses for Dry EyesThere are some manufacturers that deal specifically with the problem of contact lenses and dry eyes. For example biomedics offer their own range of frequency 55 contact lenses for dry eyes. The higher...

Contact Lenses and Dry Eyes
Contact lenses > Contact Lenses and Dry Eyes

Shows broadway