Layout 1
The Return of Hybrid
Lenses
BY
PATRICK J. CAROLINE, FAAO, & MARK P. ANDRé,
FAAO
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Figure 1. DV's corneal topography demonstrating
approximately 2.00D of with-the-rule corneal astigmatism |
For many of us, the ultimate "dream" lens for
managing regular and irregular astigmatism has always been a combination GP and
soft lens design. Surprisingly, the history of these lenses
dates back
to 1977 when Precision-Cosmet acquired the rights to a rigid-soft bonding technology
developed by Erickson and Neogi. This evolved into the first commercially available
hybrid contact lens, the Saturn II, in 1985. Sola-Barns Hind purchased the technology
and in 1989 it released a new and improved design called the SoftPerm lens. This
design featured an 8mm Opus III rigid lens center (Dk/14) in a bi-curve design and
a soft 25-percent-water peripheral skirt. The soft peripheral skirt remained its
original 25-percent-water HEMA-based material.
In
2001, a California-based research group began developing a new high-Dk hybrid contact
lens that would become the SynergEyes lens. The lens incorporates an 8.2mm high-Dk
rigid center (Paragon HDS 100, Dk 100) and a 30-percent-water non-ionic soft lens
skirt. The overall lens diameter is 14.5mm.
The first of three contact lens designs, SynergEyes A, received
FDA approval in September. Two more designs are currently in investigation: the
SynergEyes KC, an aspheric lens specifically for keratoconus and post-LASIK ectasia,
and SynergEyes PS, for patients who have highly oblate corneas following refractive
surgery.
A New Alternative
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Figure 2. The desired 30 microns of apical
clearance. |
We've successfully used the SynergEyes contact lens design for
patients in which more traditional GP and soft lens designs failed to provide adequate
comfort and/or vision. An example is patient DV, a 22-year-old male competing in
college level tennis. He had moderate with-the-rule corneal astigmatism and wore
toric soft contact lenses with only moderate visual success (Figure 1).
We
diagnostically fit DV with the SynergEyes A contact lens from the 24-lens diagnostic
set. We selected a base curve with a radius approximately 0.30mm steeper than flat
K (flat K = 7.90mm, base curve 7.60mm).
Studies have shown that it's important that the base curves of
SynergEyes contact lenses vault the corneal apex (Figure 2); paradoxically, it's
the apical vaulting that prevents late onset tightening. The lens is available in
two standard skirt curve radii, 1.0mm and 1.3mm flatter than the base curve radius
(Figure 3).
Today, DV wears his contact lenses 16 hours a day and enjoys consistent
20/15 visual acuity. CLS
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Figure
3. Profile view of a well-fit Synerg-Eyes lens. Note the apical clearance. |
Patrick Caroline is an associate
professor of optometry at Pacific University and is an assistant professor of ophthalmology
at the Oregon Health Sciences University. He is also a consultant to Paragon Vision
Sciences and SynergEyes, Inc. Mark André is director of contact lens services
at the Oregon Health Sciences University and serves as an assistant professor of
optometry at Pacific University. He is also a consultant for Alcon Labs, CooperVision
and SynergEyes, Inc.
Contact Lens Spectrum, Issue: December 2005