Health & Wellbeing

Overnight lenses correct farsightedness

Overnight lenses correct farsightedness
Optician and optometrist Jaume Paune is the creator of contact lenses capable of correcting hyperopia without surgery
Optician and optometrist Jaume Paune is the creator of contact lenses capable of correcting hyperopia without surgery
View 2 Images
Optician and optometrist Jaume Paune is the creator of contact lenses capable of correcting hyperopia without surgery
1/2
Optician and optometrist Jaume Paune is the creator of contact lenses capable of correcting hyperopia without surgery
The lens uses orthokeratology, a technique that reshapes the cornea to correct mild to moderate vision defects
2/2
The lens uses orthokeratology, a technique that reshapes the cornea to correct mild to moderate vision defects

If you suffer from hyperopia, more commonly known as farsightedness or longsightedness, you may be interested to know that the world's first contact lens to correct the condition has been developed. The correction, however, is temporary – a custom-made lens is worn overnight to reshape the cornea, and when the patient wakes up and removes the lens they have perfect vision for the day.

The contact lens works via a process called orthokeratology, or ortho-K.

The rigid, gas-permeable contact lens applies pressure to the tear film that coats the outside of the cornea. This pressure changes the shape of the cornea by about 20 µm, or about half the width of a strand of human hair.

The lens was designed by Jaume Pauné, a graduate of the Master's Degree in Optometry and Vision Sciences at the College of Optics and Optometry of Terrassa of the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC)-Barcelona Tech.

Pauné began experimenting with the hyperopia lens following a conference in 2005 where another ortho-K lens was presented, but never marketed. Pauné's thesis involved the research, design and manufacture of a new model to correct hyperopia. He tested it on ten people, one of whom tried six different models of the lens, each for a period of one week.

The lenses are being sold at an initial price of US$1,270, which includes the cost of designing unique lenses, and $508 for annual replacement lenses.

Those of us afflicted with shortsightedness can only hope for something similar in the future!

4 comments
4 comments
Smokey_Bear
holy shit! as at that price, I\'ll pass.
(although I\'m near-sighted) that price is a joke. you can get lazed for about 500 more.....
I\'m sticking with contacts until I can get laser surgery done at a reasonable price
SMORTH
Hate to tell you but all of this is old science and already exists. I had a pair to correct my Myopia (near sightedness) and they worked excellently.
How is this news?
Look up Corneal Refractive Therapy some time when you are bored.
wealthychef
LASIK sucks for farsightedness, in fact it caused it in me. If this causes me to have 20/20 vision near and far, it is well worth it for $1500. And the price will drop, of course. I would wear them at night for the benefit. However, since it\'s been tested on only 10 people, um... I\'ll wait. Is it even approved for sale, and if so, how?
Gregg Eshelman
Intra-corneal rings are what I\'d go for. Unlike operations that use lasers or cutting the cornea, ICR can be changed if it\'s not right the first time.