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General Interest :: SITE LAST UPDATED: Mar 18, 2013  
General Interest
Champagne Corks
Color Vision
Contact Lenses
Contacts and Cosmetics
Extended-Wear Contact Lenses
Eye Anatomy
Eye Care Facts and Myths
Eyeglasses
Fireworks
First Aid for Eye Injuries
How to Insert Eye Drops
How to View an Eclipse
Jump-Starting Your Car
Legal Blindness
Living With One Good Eye
Low Vision
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Recycling Eyeglasses
Smoking and Eye Disease
Sports Eye Injuries
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Video Display Terminals
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Contact Lenses

Over 24 million people choose contact lenses to correct vision. When used with care and proper supervision, contacts are a safe and effective alternative to eyeglasses. And with today's new lens technology, many people who wear eyeglasses can also successfully wear contacts.

Contacts are thin, clear discs that float on the tear film that coats the cornea, the curved front surface of the eye. Contacts correct the same refractive conditions eyeglasses correct: myopia (nearsightedness), hyperopia (farsightedness) and astigmatism (an oval- rather than round-shaped cornea).

Contact lenses can be made from a number of different plastics. The main distinction among them is whether they are hard or soft. Most contact lens wearers in the United States wear soft lenses. These may be daily wear soft lenses, extended wear lenses or disposable lenses. Toric soft lenses provide a soft lens alternative for people with slight to moderate astigmatism.

Hard lenses are usually not as comfortable as soft lenses and are not as widely used. However, rigid gas permeable lenses provide sharper vision for people with higher refractive errors or larger degrees of astigmatism.

The majority of people can tolerate contact lenses, but there are some exceptions. Conditions that might prevent an individual from successfully wearing contact lenses include dry eye, severe allergies, frequent eye infections, or a dusty and dirty work environment.

Individuals who wear any type of contact lens overnight have a greater chance of developing infections in the cornea. These infections are often due to poor cleaning and lens care.

In order to obtain a contact lens prescription you will need to have a Comprehensive Eye Exam and a Contact Lens Fitting.

Courtesy of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. Reprinted from Patient Education CD Personal Eyes and Ophthalmic Images, with permission of the American Academy of Ophthalmology, copyright 2003. All rights reserved. Users of this website may reproduce one (1) copy of this for their own personal, noncommercial use. All Internet, web or electronic posting or transmission is not permitted.

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Locations

Eye Clinic of Racine, LTD.
3805A Spring Street

West Professional Building
All Saints -St Mary's Campus
Racine, WI 53405
 
PH: 262-637-9615 | FAX: 262-637-4437
Kenosha Toll Free: 658-8489

www.eyeclinicofracine.com

 
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