Distribution of oxygen across the surface of the human cornea during soft contact lens wear

Optom Vis Sci. 1996 Oct;73(10):659-65. doi: 10.1097/00006324-199610000-00005.

Abstract

Purpose: To determine whether tear mixing occurs beneath soft contact lenses, we examined the effect of blinking on the oxygen distribution across the corneal surface beneath a nonuniform thickness lens.

Methods: A custom-designed twin polarographic oxygen sensor assembly was used to simultaneously measure the equivalent oxygen percentage (EOP) at central and peripheral corneal locations of 10 human subjects beneath a -6.00 D thin-design hydroxyethyl mathacrylate (HEMA) lens. A -0.25 D lens served as a control. Each lens was worn for 5 min under static (no blinking) and dynamic (12 and 60 blinks/min) conditions.

Results: A significantly greater EOP (p = 0.006) was observed at the central (vs. peripheral) cornea during static and dynamic lens wear; central and peripheral oxygenation were unaffected by blinking.

Conclusions: Tear mixing is insignificant beneath thin-design HEMA lenses; therefore, oxygenation across the corneal surface beneath such lenses is best predicted from the lens thickness profile rather than average thickness.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Biosensing Techniques
  • Blinking
  • Contact Lenses, Hydrophilic*
  • Cornea / metabolism*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Oxygen / metabolism*
  • Oxygen Consumption
  • Polarography
  • Tears / metabolism

Substances

  • Oxygen