Publication date
2004Keyword
Aspheric front surface soft contact lensesSCLs
Spherical refractive error
Ocular spherical aberration
Peer-Reviewed
YesOpen Access status
closedAccess
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Following aberroscopy, aspheric front surface soft contact lenses (SCLs) were custom-made to correct spherical refractive error and ocular spherical aberration (SA) of 18 myopic and five hypermetropic subjects (age, 20.5 . 5 yr). On-eye residual aberrations, logMAR visual acuity, and contrast sensitivity were compared with the best-correcting spectacle lens, an equally powered standard SCL, and an SCL designed to be aberration free in air. Custom-made and spherical SCLs reduced SA ( p . 0.001; p . 0.05) but did not change total root-meansquare (rms) wave-front aberration (WFA). Aberration-free SCLs increased SA ( p . 0.05), coma ( p . 0.05), and total rms WFA. Visual acuity remained unchanged with any of the SCL types compared with the spectacle lens correction. Contrast sensitivity at 6 cycles/degree improved with the custom-made SCLs ( p . 0.05). Increased coma with aspheric lens designs and uncorrected astigmatism limit the small possible visual benefit from correcting ocular SA with SCLs.Version
No full-text in the repositoryCitation
Cox. M.J. and Dietze, H.H. (2004). Correcting ocular spherical aberration with soft contact lenses. Journal of the Optical Society of America. A. Vol. 21, No. 4, pp. 473-485.Link to Version of Record
https://doi.org/10.1364/JOSAA.21.000473Type
Articleae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1364/JOSAA.21.000473