Fixing
your eyesight... while you sleep!
News in Detail,
April 14, 2004
UNSW researchers have
found the first scientific evidence that special
orthokeratology (OK) contact lenses worn only
while you sleep may be able to correct long-sightedness;
Key points:
- UNSW researchers have found
the first scientific evidence that special
orthokeratology (OK) contact lenses worn only
while you sleep may be able to correct long-sightedness;
- The pilot study holds future
promise of a safe, simple and reversible treatment
for the many people with this vision problem
(when you can see distant objects clearly
but close objects are blurry). In Australia,
moderate long-sightedness affects 8% to 10%
of the population.
- The finding builds on the
team's earlier studies into the often dramatic
and rapid improvements achieved with OK lens
therapy for myopia - or short-sightedness.
Many myopic people have been able literally
to throw away their glasses.
- View
pictures (off-site)
Background:
A traditional
Chinese remedy for short-sightedness reportedly
was to sleep with small sandbags on the
eyes.
Australia now plays a leading role in a
myopia therapy that uses special orthokeratology
(known as OK or ortho-K) contact lenses
that are worn during sleep and removed during
waking hours.
The rigid polymer lenses are flattened in
the centre so that they gently press on
the soft surface of the cornea to reshape
it and correct its focal length.
Vision begins to change within as little
as 10 minutes and many myopic people can
see normally - without the need for spectacles
-after only a week of wearing OK lenses
at night. Some then need only use the lenses
every two or three nights to maintain normal
vision. Others with a greater degree of
myopia need to wear them every night.
The therapy is safe, reversible, highly
effective, much cheaper (about $1,200 in
total, including consultation and follow-up)
than laser surgery (about $5,000 for both
eyes). Vision returns to its prior state
when users stop wearing OK lenses.
It’s estimated that about two-thirds
of myopic people can have their vision problems
corrected in this way. |
What's new?
A pilot study by a team led
by Dr Helen Swarbrick, a senior lecturer and contact
lens expert in the UNSW School of Optometry and
Vision Science, now has found evidence that a
new “steep” OK lens design may be
able to overcome long-sightedness.
The
study suggests that a steep lens could
work by reshaping the wearer’s cornea
to alter the eye’s focal length
in the opposite way to the effect achieved
by using flat lenses to correct short-sightedness.
(see
graphic)
The study involved 10 young adults
being fitted with steep OK lenses for
four hours. Before-and-after tests showed
a significant steepening of the subjects’
corneas and they also reported a small
but significant reduction in long-sightedness.
A report on the study has been accepted
for publication in the leading US science
journal Optometry and Vision Science.
It will be the
first research paper in a refereed scientific
|
|
journal to show the potential
for OK lenses to correct long-sightedness.
Dr Swarbrick comments:
“Although the study involved only a small
number of subjects, it’s very promising
that we were able to achieve a measurable change
even in such a short time. We now plan to expand
on this preliminary study with a more extensive
research program starting later this year, with
industry backing.”
"It happens so fast it's
amazing!"
She began researching OK lens
therapy for short-sightedness in 1997 and was
“a complete sceptic” at the time
but soon became a convert when she saw them
in action.
“It happens so fast it’s
amazing: even after as little as 10 minutes
of OK lens use, some short-sighted people can
read unassisted a further two lines down an
eight-line eye chart. After one night’s
wear, some people can read up to six or seven
lines down the chart.
“There’s increasing
interest around the world; it’s an amazingly
wide field of research and Australians lead
the way both in research and in the design and
manufacture of OK lenses.”
Fellow UNSW researcher, Ms Nina
Tahhan, clinic research manager for the Vision
Co-operative Research Centre, recently published
a research report on myopic OK lens therapy
involving 60 subjects. It confirmed that about
three-quarters of the benefit is achieved on
the first night alone and that very little further
change occurred after the first week.
“People are a bit sceptical
about it but I use them myself and I can tell
you that I had glasses from the age of 15 and
hated wearing them: now, I couldn’t even
tell you where my glasses are,” says Ms
Tahhan.
About 25 per cent of the Australian
population – some five million people
– are affected by myopia to varying degrees.
About two-thirds of those are moderately affected
and are potentially treatable with ortho-K lenses,
Dr Swarbrick believes.
“It’s a very exciting
therapy with dramatic results.”
Despite them having been in
use nationally since the mid-1990s, less than
2,000 Australians have had the therapy so far,
according to Dr Gavin Boneham, a Sydney optometrist.
Dr Boneham is President of the
Orthokeratology Society of Australia, which
represents practitioners in the field. He is
also a part-time lecturer in optometry at UNSW.
“It’s a very exciting
therapy with dramatic results,” he says.
“You can put a lens on a person and start
to see some improvement within an hour.
“Whenever you do it with
patients they invariably say: ‘Why haven’t
I heard of this before?
“It usually takes only
three or four days before they can go all day
without contact lenses or glasses and there’s
no problem with dry eye – which affects
some contact lens wearers – because they
only have them in at night.”
Modern contact lenses for overnight
wear are permeable to oxygen, which greatly
reduces the chances of infection and swelling.
Dr Boneham says the OK lens
safety record in Australia is excellent, with
only two recorded cases of infection resulting
from their use. In both cases, poor hygiene
was involved.
“Myopia epidemic in East
Asia”
Dr Swarbrick recently analysed
38 published reports of serious complications
from OK lens use throughout the world in the
past four years and found that the vast majority
were from the People’s Republic of China.
The types of infections reported
there often involved bacteria associated with
poor water quality. Dr Swarbrick says that the
high infection rate in China emphasises the
need for good hygiene, high lens quality and
skilled practitioner training.
Interest in treatments for myopia
in East Asia generally has increased markedly
in line with the reported myopia epidemic there,
she says.
“Up to half the children
in many kindergarten classes in Taiwan now wear
glasses, and 90 per cent of 18 year-olds there
are myopic,” she says. “The sharp
increase in myopia in East Asia has happened
in just one generation.
“An increase in urbanisation,
television, computers and intense education
– requiring much greater use of close
vision in the young – have all been raised
as potential influences but we still don’t
know exactly what’s causing it.”
Surveys of schoolchildren visiting
the UNSW School of Optometry have not found
a similar trend.
Dr Swarbrick will be the invited
keynote speaker at the forthcoming Second Global
Orthokeratology Symposium at Toronto, Canada,
in July, where she will also receive the Rodger
Kame Memorial Award for her research on the
issue. |