Ocular effects of exposure to low‐humidity environment with contact lens wear: A pilot study

Author:

Vaughan Megan1ORCID,García‐Porta Nery23ORCID,Tabernero Juan14,Gantes‐Nuñez Javier5,Artal Pablo6,Pardhan Shahina1

Affiliation:

1. Vision and Eye Research Institute, School of Medicine Anglia Ruskin University Cambridge UK

2. Applied Physics Department, Optics and Optometry Faculty University of Santiago de Compostela Santiago Spain

3. Institute of Materials (iMATUS) University of Santiago de Compostela Santiago Spain

4. Department of Electromagnetism and Electronics University of Murcia Murcia Spain

5. Arizona College of Optometry Midwestern University Glendale Arizona USA

6. Laboratorio de Óptica, Centro de Investigación en Óptica y Nanofísica, Campus Espinardo University of Murcia Murcia Spain

Abstract

AbstractPurposeTo compare the ocular effects of exposure to a low‐humidity environment with and without contact lens (CL) wear using various non‐invasive tests.MethodsFourteen habitual soft CL wearers were exposed to controlled low humidity (5% relative humidity [RH]) in an environmental chamber for 90 min on two separate occasions. First, when wearing their habitual spectacles and then, on a separate visit, when wearing silicone hydrogel CLs that were fitted specifically for this purpose. All participants had adapted to the new CL prior to data collection. Three non‐invasive objective measurements were taken at each visit: blinking rate, objective ocular scatter (measured using the objective scatter index) and ocular surface cooling rate (measured using a long‐wave infrared thermal camera). At each visit, measurements were taken before the exposure in comfortable environmental conditions (RH: 45%), and after exposure to environmental stress (low humidity, RH: 5%).ResultsCL wearers showed increased blinking rate (p < 0.005) and ocular scatter (p = 0.03) but similar cooling rate of the ocular surface (p = 0.08) when compared with spectacle wear in comfortable environmental conditions. The exposure to low humidity increased the blinking rate significantly with both types of corrections (p = 0.01). Interestingly, ocular scatter (p = 0.96) and cooling rate (p = 0.73) were not significantly different before and after exposure to low humidity. There were no significant two‐way interactions between correction and exposure in any of the measurements.ConclusionsCLs significantly increased the blinking rate, which prevented a quick degradation of the tear film integrity as it was refreshed more regularly. It is hypothesised that the increased blinking rate in CL wearers aids in maintaining ocular scatter quality and cooling rate when exposed to a low‐humidity environment. These results highlight the importance of blinking in maintaining tear film stability.

Funder

Anglia Ruskin University

H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions

Publisher

Wiley

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Reimagining approaches to solving common contact lens conundrums;Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics;2024-04-26

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