| Literature DB >> 31086372 |
Ahmed Abass1, Samantha Stuart1,2, Bernardo T Lopes1,3, Dong Zhou1, Brendan Geraghty1, Richard Wu4,5, Steve Jones1, Ilse Flux6, Reinier Stortelder6, Arnoud Snepvangers6, Renato Leca3,7, Ahmed Elsheikh1,8,9.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of soft contact lens eye-fit on optical power by computational modelling and to produce correction maps for reversing this impact during the design process.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31086372 PMCID: PMC6516737 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Selected eyes to model from participants’ data.
| Subject ID | Eye classification | Eye side | Sex | Age | Flat Sim-K Power |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant 1 | Flat | Right | Female | 28 year | 41.8 D (8.07 mm) |
| Participant 2 | Average | Left | Male | 34 year | 43.8 D (7.71 mm) |
| Participant 3 | Steep | Right | Female | 25 year | 46.8 D (7.21 mm) |
Contact lenses design parameters.
| Eye | Contact lens | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classification | Base curve radius | Spherical power | Cylindrical power | Diameter |
| Flat | 8.8 mm | -20.0 D, -15.0 D, -10.0 D, -5.0 D, 0.0 D, 5.0 D, 10.0 D, 15.0 D, 20.0 D | -20 D, -15 D, -10 D, -5 D, -2.5 D, -1 D, 0 D, 1 D, 2.5 D, 5 D, 10 D, 15 D, 20 D | 14.5 mm, 15.0 mm, 15.5 mm |
| Average | 8.5 mm | |||
| Steep | 8.2 mm | |||
Fig 1Hydrated clear hydrogel sample on a metallic silver thick paper layer underneath to ensure clear appearance in the photograph, (a) before the cut, (b) after the cut.
Fig 2Double blade cutting tool used for strip extraction including (a) individual components and (b) assembled tool.
Fig 3Test set up showing (a) sclera strip specimen attached to assembled clamps, (b) specimen fitted to mechanical clamps and connected to a material testing machine.
Fig 4Mean stress-strain curve of 3 hydrogel samples.
Fig 5Contact lens finite element model, (a) before fitting, (b) after fitting where the maximum effective Lagrange strain at the final step of this simulation was 0.0768.
Fig 6Geometry parameters of contact lenses design.
Range of values used in lens design.
| Base curve radius (back optic zone radius) | R1b | 8.8, 8.5 & 8.2 mm |
| Optic zone diameter | d1 | 8 mm |
| Balance zone ballast central diameter | d2 | 11.25, 11.5 & 11.75 mm |
| Overall lens diameter | d3 | 14.5, 15.0 & 15.5 mm |
Fig 7Light-ray tracing of a -20D spherical lens according to Snell's law.
Fig 8Effective power change in spherical lenses where the x-axis reports the spherical power of the contact lens when fitted to (a) a flat eye, (b) an average eye, (c) a steep eye and (d) all eyes.
Fig 9Effective power change in toric lenses where the x-axis reports the cylindrical power of the contact lens when fitted to (a) a flat eye, (b) an average eye, (c) a steep eye and (d) all eyes.
Fig 10Parametric analysis of spherical prescriptions, (a) effect of lens diameter, (b) effect of the lens base curve.
Fig 11Parametric analysis of toric prescriptions, (a) effect of lens diameter, (b) effect of the lens base curve.