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3. Ocular surface health with contact lens wear

  • Joseph P. Shovlin
  • , Pablo Argüeso
  • , Nicole Carnt
  • , Robin L. Chalmers
  • , Nathan Efron
  • , Suzanne M.J. Fleiszig
  • , Jason J. Nichols
  • , Kenneth A. Polse
  • , Fiona Stapleton
  • , Lee Wiley
  • , Mark Willcox
  • , Frank V. Bright
  • , Lyndon W. Jones
  • , Nancy Keir
  • , Rachael C. Peterson
  • Northeastern Eye Institute

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Eye care practitioners (ECPs) would tend to agree that wearing contact lenses increases the risk for infection, but millions of patients are still fitted with lenses every year because ECPs feel that the risk is manageable and that their patients' eye health can be protected. The Fusarium and Acanthamoeba keratitis outbreaks of years past were a wake-up call to manufacturers, ECPs, and regulatory agencies that risk cannot be managed without diligence, and that the complex relationship between contact lens materials, contact lens solutions, and compliance needs to be better understood in order to optimize the efficacy of contact lens care and improve care guidelines.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)S14-S21
JournalContact Lens and Anterior Eye
Volume36
Issue numberSUPPL.
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 15 2013

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