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  • Title: Contact lens-induced corneal swelling and surface changes measured with the Orbscan II corneal topographer.
    Author: Moezzi AM, Fonn D, Simpson TL, Sorbara L.
    Journal: Optom Vis Sci; 2004 Mar; 81(3):189-93. PubMed ID: 15017178.
    Abstract:
    PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to measure central and topographical corneal swelling in response to contact lens wear and eye closure, to determine whether the swelling induced by soft and polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) lenses is different, and to determine whether the anterior and/or posterior corneal shape alters with corneal swelling. METHODS: An Orbscan II corneal topographer was used to measure corneal swelling and the shape of the anterior and posterior corneal surfaces of 16 neophytes before and after wearing soft and PMMA contact lenses with near-zero oxygen transmissibility. The lens-wearing eye was patched for 3 h. RESULTS: The mean 15.1% +/- 3.8% (+/- SD) central corneal swelling with soft lenses was significantly >12.6% +/- 4.1% with PMMA lenses. Topographical corneal swelling was significantly greater with soft vs. PMMA lenses. However, the difference between central and peripheral corneal swelling was much greater with PMMA lenses. With both lenses, the cornea swelled significantly more in the center than the periphery. The anterior best-fit sphere radius remained unchanged in response to soft lenses (0.00 +/- 0.04 mm) and steepened slightly but significantly with PMMA lenses (-0.04 +/- 0.05 mm). The posterior best-fit sphere radius flattened significantly with both lenses (0.12 +/- 0.07 mm with soft and 0.14 +/- 0.08 mm with PMMA lenses). CONCLUSIONS: Corneal swelling (greater centrally than peripherally) flattens the posterior surface of the cornea and is independent of lens type. Although the anterior best-fit sphere radius steepened with PMMA, the magnitude is probably clinically unimportant. Both lens types produced greater central vs. peripheral corneal swelling. However, the soft lens induced significantly greater overall swelling than PMMA. Because their oxygen transmission was the same, these results suggest that there is lateral diffusion of oxygen from the peripheral area of the cornea (that is not covered by the lens) toward the center.
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