Purpose: Multifocal soft contact lenses have been used to decrease the progression of myopia, presumably by inducing relative peripheral myopia at the same time as the central image is focused on the fovea. The aim of this study was to investigate how the peripheral optical effect of commercially available multifocal soft contact lenses can be evaluated from objective wavefront measurements.
Methods: Two multifocal lenses with high and low add and one monofocal design were measured over the ±40° horizontal field, using a scanning Hartmann–Shack wavefront sensor on four subjects. The effect on the refractive shift, the peripheral image quality, and the depth of field of the lenses was evaluated using the area under the modulation transfer function as the image quality metric.
Results: The multifocal lenses with a centre distance design and 2 dioptres of add induced about 0.50 dioptre of relative peripheral myopia at 30° in the nasal visual field. For larger off-axis angles the border of the optical zone of the lenses severely degraded image quality. Moreover, these multifocal lenses also significantly reduced the image quality and increased the depth of field for angles as small as 10°–15°.
Conclusions: The proposed methodology showed that the tested multifocal soft contact lenses gave a very small peripheral myopic shift in these four subjects and that they would need a larger optical zone and a more controlled depth of field to explain a possible treatment effect on myopia progression.
Search
Categories
Archives
- December 2024 (2)
- October 2024 (5)
- July 2024 (8)
- June 2024 (1)
- October 2023 (2)
- July 2023 (5)
- June 2023 (1)
- July 2022 (10)
- July 2021 (5)
- March 2021 (2)
- October 2020 (36)
- September 2020 (122)
- August 2020 (10)
- July 2020 (38)
- April 2020 (1)
- April 2018 (1)
- September 2017 (2)
Evaluating the peripheral optical effect of multifocal contact lenses
- Voptica
- Other Publications
Journal:
Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics
Year:
2012
Link:
Authors:
Robert Rosén; Bart Jaeken; Anna Lindskoog Petterson; Pablo Artal; Peter Unsbo; Linda Lundström