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posted
I have a pretty strong prescription and wear glasses and contacts (currently Acuvue Oasys)

I can see great with glasses but my contacts are uncomfortable and seem to dry out easily causing my vision to not be as sharp with them (cannot wear them for shooting).

I always seem to get steered into the contact brands that the optical center wants to push (last time was Acuvue Vita which were not any better).

Does anyone have any specific brand recommendations that I can bring up in my next appointment? I want the absolute best contact I can get regardless of price (I am wondering if the daily wears might be a solution)?

.
 
Posts: 326 | Registered: January 26, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
It's not you,
it's me.
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Daily wears are the way to go. Love putting fresh ones in everyday. All brands work for me.
 
Posts: 7016 | Location: Right outside Philly | Registered: September 08, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Mine are Cooper Vision BioFinity Energys.

They're extended wear (sleep in) that are recommended to be taken out at least once a week.

Been in these for a few years & happy with them. My prescription is -9.5 in both eyes, so the sleep in was an appealing factor. Being able to see when I wake up is amazing.




The Enemy's gate is down.
 
Posts: 15314 | Location: Spring, TX | Registered: July 11, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I wear Focus Dailies. I could never wear contacts more than once without them burning my eyes.

I think you will really like the daily contacts.


 
Posts: 5416 | Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA | Registered: February 27, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Six Days on the Road
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Do any of you guys who wear the dailies have a reasonably priced source for them? I’ve tried them and liked them but they seem quite a bit more expensive than the ones I’ve been wearing.
 
Posts: 759 | Location: The Boulevard of Broken Dreams | Registered: June 16, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
blame canada
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I have acuvue oasys with hydraclear plus for astigmatism.

-6.50 & -6.75

I bought a one year supply from 1800contacts online, back in 2012, which was my last DR appt. I wear them until they get fuzzy or dry, or need a good cleaning...or when I know I'm not going anywhere for a couple days (like a long winter weekend). Then I yank them out and wear glasses for a day or 3. I probably do this once a month. I keep 2 pairs in the clear care soaking solution, which works well. I hand scrub them when I remove them and again after the clear care soak...with opti-free replenish. So I have 3 pairs in a constant rotation. If I am forced to travel to some god-awful place like the willamette valley during grass season...I'll chew through 2-3 pairs a week. When I stay home in Alaska, I may finally wear out 1 lense every 4-8 months. Usually by getting something in my eye, or getting a little over-aggressive with the opti-free scrub.

I'm getting down to about 6 lenses for each eye left, so after 7+ years I'm going to be forced to see an eye doc again to replenish the supply.

I wear them at night if my eyes will allow it. Absent of sickness and allergies traveling...I can pretty much do this 99% of the time. My anxiety doesn't do well when I can't pop an eye open and survey the room every couple of hours. I find that I sleep much better at night when I wear my contacts. But I'm a weirdo...and I generally ignor doctors orders. Especially VA nurses who like to pose as docs.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"The trouble with our Liberal friends...is not that they're ignorant, it's just that they know so much that isn't so." Ronald Reagan, 1964
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Arguing with some people is like playing chess with a pigeon. It doesn't matter how good I am at chess, the pigeon will just take a shit on the board, strut around knocking over all the pieces and act like it won.. and in some cases it will insult you at the same time." DevlDogs55, 2014 Big Grin
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Posts: 13957 | Location: On the mouth of the great Kenai River | Registered: June 24, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Eye Doc
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Alcon Dailies Total 1. IMNSHO, these are the best soft contact lenses available today, and I wear the multifocal version. They are NOT inexpensive, but it is rare they will not be accepted by a wearer. Most that try them are *very* happy with them, and the cost becomes a non-issue.

Rebates available from your local eye doc ($200.00) drops the cost for an annual supply.
 
Posts: 2935 | Location: (Occupied) Northern Minnesota | Registered: June 24, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by AKSuperDually:
I have acuvue oasys with hydraclear plus for astigmatism.

-6.50 & -6.75

I bought a one year supply from 1800contacts online, back in 2012, which was my last DR appt. I wear them until they get fuzzy or dry, or need a good cleaning...or when I know I'm not going anywhere for a couple days (like a long winter weekend). Then I yank them out and wear glasses for a day or 3. I probably do this once a month. I keep 2 pairs in the clear care soaking solution, which works well. I hand scrub them when I remove them and again after the clear care soak...with opti-free replenish. So I have 3 pairs in a constant rotation. If I am forced to travel to some god-awful place like the willamette valley during grass season...I'll chew through 2-3 pairs a week. When I stay home in Alaska, I may finally wear out 1 lense every 4-8 months. Usually by getting something in my eye, or getting a little over-aggressive with the opti-free scrub.

I'm getting down to about 6 lenses for each eye left, so after 7+ years I'm going to be forced to see an eye doc again to replenish the supply.

I wear them at night if my eyes will allow it. Absent of sickness and allergies traveling...I can pretty much do this 99% of the time. My anxiety doesn't do well when I can't pop an eye open and survey the room every couple of hours. I find that I sleep much better at night when I wear my contacts. But I'm a weirdo...and I generally ignor doctors orders. Especially VA nurses who like to pose as docs.


You’re playing with fire, IMNSHO. You may never develop a corneal ulcer, but just once, and your cost-savings is cancelled. I’d recommend you rethink...but hey, they’re your eyes.
 
Posts: 2935 | Location: (Occupied) Northern Minnesota | Registered: June 24, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I had issues with my contacts and doing some research I learned that you can become sensitive to contact solution. Once I switched to daily contacts no more issues.




Desperate Times Call for Desperate Measures.


NRA Shotgun Instructor
NRA Rifle Instructor
 
Posts: 640 | Location: Central Illinois | Registered: May 20, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I've been wearing these since 2007...

https://www.1800contacts.com/l...optix-night-day-aqua



They are VERY comfortable! I typically wear my contacts only when I'm flying or if I'm going out; otherwise I wear my glasses on my days off. It's stated they're "approved for 30 nights of continuous wear", but there's NO WAY I'd do that...my Optometrist would bludgeon me with a blunt, heavy object. The longest I've gone without taking them out is MAYBE 5 nights...typical schedule is 3 to 4 nights.

Unfortunately I'm at the age that I have to wear cheater glasses when I'm wearing my contacts to see sh*t up close... Mad Mad

ETA: Zeke mentioned contact solution. I've been using Bausch & Lomb Renu for YEARS with no issues, but my Optometrist gave my Bio True the last time I went to see her for my annual checkup. I have yet to use it and typically throw those in my shaving kit for when I'm at work as an "emergency" solution since it's the smaller 2 oz. "sample" bottles.



"If you’re a leader, you lead the way. Not just on the easy ones; you take the tough ones too…” – MAJ Richard D. Winters (1918-2011), E Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne

"Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil... Therefore, as tongues of fire lick up straw and as dry grass sinks down in the flames, so their roots will decay and their flowers blow away like dust; for they have rejected the law of the Lord Almighty and spurned the word of the Holy One of Israel." - Isaiah 5:20,24
 
Posts: 11066 | Location: NW Houston | Registered: April 04, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
The success of a solution usually depends upon your point of view
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quote:
Originally posted by AKSuperDually:
I have acuvue oasys with hydraclear plus for astigmatism.

-6.50 & -6.75

I bought a one year supply from 1800contacts online, back in 2012



Dude, we put a 5 year expiration date on those for a reason.



“We truly live in a wondrous age of stupid.” - 83v45magna

"I think it's important that people understand free speech doesn't mean free from consequences societally or politically or culturally."
-Pranjit Kalita, founder and CIO of Birkoa Capital Management

 
Posts: 3851 | Location: Jacksonville, FL | Registered: September 10, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Thanks for all the recommendations.

I did some research on them and have a list to take into my appointment tomorrow.

The research I have done so far is telling me to go with the silicone hydrogels so I will see if I can get a variety of trials.

The Coopervision ProClear 1 Days seem to get good reviews....

.
 
Posts: 326 | Registered: January 26, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Not as lean, not as mean,
Still a Marine
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I wear CooperVision Biofinity Torric for my astigmatism, which were recommended to me to mitigate all the damage I did to my eyes in the past.

I used to wear mine like AKSuperDially did, then I noticed my vision getting worse. I was developing blood vessels growing to my cornea from the O2 starvation. It also caused keratoconus and I was placed on a corneal transplant list while trying different options to save my eyes.

Once my corneas calmed down, I was taken off contacts and wore glasses only for 5 years. I changed insurances, and subsequently changed doctors, and he was willing to try and help me with contacts again.

After trying may different brands as weekend only wear, we settled on the Coopervision and he closely monitored me as I extended my wear to daily (taking out nightly). He was pleased with my results, and I'm ecstatic to be in contacts with good vision again.




I shall respect you until you open your mouth, from that point on, you must earn it yourself.
 
Posts: 3352 | Location: Southern Maine | Registered: February 10, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Went to the appointment and was given 4 trial options:

- Alcon Dailies AquaComfort Plus (Toric)
- Bausch & Lomb Bio true Daily (Toric)
- Bausch & Lomb Bio true Daily (non Toric)
- Alcon Dailies Total 1 (non Toric)

Both of the Torics were unwearable for me and have been ruled out.

The Bio true lenses are 78% water and the Alcon Dailies are 33% water, both are very nice but somewhat different.

The Alcon Dailies Total seem heavier in my eyes and are harder to take out and do not cause any dryness.

The Bio true lenses are lighter and easy to take out but seem to dry out a bit with extended screen time.

I am leaning towards the Alcon Dailies Total but haven't fully decided......


.
 
Posts: 326 | Registered: January 26, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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quote:
You’re playing with fire, IMNSHO. You may never develop a corneal ulcer, but just once, and your cost-savings is cancelled. I’d recommend you rethink...but hey, they’re your eyes.

^^^^^^^^^^^^
Besides the expense, ulcers are incredibly painful. My daughter developed one from her contacts and luckily did not lose vision. She was in an incredible amount of pain and had to put drops in every few hours not to mention frequent trips to monitor progress.
 
Posts: 17234 | Location: Stuck at home | Registered: January 02, 2015Reply With QuoteReport This Post
אַרְיֵה
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quote:
Originally posted by erj_pilot:

I've been wearing these since 2007.
That is a LONG time for a pair of contact lenses!



הרחפת שלי מלאה בצלופחים
 
Posts: 30663 | Location: Central Florida, Orlando area | Registered: January 03, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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^^^^^
Work good. Last long time.

Big Grin



"If you’re a leader, you lead the way. Not just on the easy ones; you take the tough ones too…” – MAJ Richard D. Winters (1918-2011), E Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne

"Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil... Therefore, as tongues of fire lick up straw and as dry grass sinks down in the flames, so their roots will decay and their flowers blow away like dust; for they have rejected the law of the Lord Almighty and spurned the word of the Holy One of Israel." - Isaiah 5:20,24
 
Posts: 11066 | Location: NW Houston | Registered: April 04, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Chip away the stone
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Something else that might help that my eye Dr. recommended I do is a few times a day to do a handful of kind of hard-squeezing blinks, especially when spending lot of time looking at a screen. This seems to push out some tears, or oils, that naturally moisten your eyes.
 
Posts: 11597 | Registered: August 22, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Only the strong survive
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Reversing Dry Eye Syndrome

Dry eye syndrome is not only uncomfortable but can damage ocular tissue. Japanese scientists have discovered that maqui berry extract boosts the body’s own tear production while helping to protect the eyes.

By Michael Downey

An estimated 20 million Americans or more suffer from dry eye syndrome.

This condition occurs when the eyes don’t produce enough quality tears. It’s one of the most common eye conditions seen by physicians.1

Dry eye symptoms include burning, stinging, grittiness, tearing, foreign body sensation, ocular fatigue, and dryness. Dry eye syndrome significantly affects quality of life.1,2

Mainstream solutions for dry eyes are limited. Over-the-counter eye drops, or “artificial tears,” provide only short-term relief.3

Restasis®, a prescription drug approved by the FDA specifically for dry eye syndrome, can cause side effects such as burning, itching, stinging, redness, and blurred vision—the very dry eye symptoms you’re trying to eliminate!4

Japanese scientists have found a better alternative. Maqui berry extract is an oral supplement that safely combats dry eyes by boosting the body’s tear production.5,6 As a result, this berry extract can deliver rapid and long-lasting relief for dry, irritated eyes, while also helping to protect the eyes from long-term damage.

Clinical research demonstrates that a single oral capsule daily relieves dry eye syndrome within 30 days and provides lasting relief—without risky prescription-drug eye-drops’ side-effects.6

Dry Eye Health Risks

Tears are absolutely essential for protecting the cornea, the front surface of the eye. In addition to providing lubrication, tears help protect the eyes from infection, wash away foreign matter, and deliver critical nutrients. Because the cornea contains no blood vessels, it relies on the aqueous humor (fluid behind the cornea) and an adequate flow of high-quality tears for delivery of nutrients and infection-fighters.7,8

Tears are important to lubricate and nourish the eye, but when these are of poor quality or not produced in sufficient amounts, it leads to a condition known as keratoconjunctivitis sicca or simply dry eye syndrome.2

Insufficient lubrication of the cornea has two critical consequences: discomfort now and eye damage later.

Today, the stinging, itching, inflammation, light-sensitivity, distraction, and difficulty focusing can reduce quality of life. Studies show that eye irritation can become so disturbing that it can even lower scores on standard mental-health scales.9,10

But over time, what started off as a mild irritation can turn into vision impairment. That’s because tears carry antimicrobial defenses that help prevent eye infections. Reduced production or increased evaporation can result in damage to the cornea and the conjunctiva, which is the layer that lines the eyeball and inner surfaces of the lids.1 Scratches and other injuries to the cornea don’t heal well in the presence of dry eye.11 When the cornea becomes damaged, it can ultimately impair vision.7

Increased Prevalence of Dry Eye

The prevalence of dry eye syndrome has been rising both in the US and worldwide, especially among women.1,6,12

This is associated with a variety of risk factors including aging, computers, flat-screen displays, smart phones, contact lenses, vision-correcting and cataract surgeries, and stresses, including stress from ultraviolet exposure.1,13-18

Quality—Not Just Quantity—of Tears

Dry eye syndrome has a number of potential causes.

People with dry eyes generally don’t produce enough tears, their tears evaporate too quickly, or, most critically, they have a low quality of tear film.

Tear film contains three layers—oil, water, and mucous.3 The health of the cornea and conjunctiva require all three layers to be of good quality.

The minute quantity of tears produced daily—normally ranging from under 1 mL to just over 3 mL per eye6—needs to lubricate, nourish, and protect the comparatively large surface area of the eye. If the water element (the middle layer) evaporates too rapidly, the remaining tear fluid becomes excessively concentrated,19-21 which in turn impairs many of the tear film’s critical functions.

In addition, having insufficient tears causes inflammation, which then lowers tear production even further, creating a vicious cycle.19

Two of the most common characteristics of dry eye syndrome are the inadequacy of the water layer of tears produced by the lacrimal glands and insufficient oil production from the meibomian glands.22

It’s no wonder artificial tears fall short when it comes to treating dry eye: they can’t replicate the complex structure of real tears.

That’s what makes research into the effects of maqui berry extract on tear production so exciting. Maqui berry extract safely and quickly boosts the body’s own tear production. As a result, it delivers fast, long-lasting relief for dry, irritated eyes—while also helping to protect the eyes from long-term damage.6

The Three Layers of Lubricating Tear Film

The outermost or surface layer of tear film is the oil layer and is produced by glands on the edge of your eyelids called the meibomian glands. It prevents overly rapid tear evaporation.26,27
The middle layer is the water layer and is produced by the lacrimal glands. It is an essential component of tear film.28
The innermost or bottom layer, directly over the cornea, is the mucin layer. It provides lubrication and protection to the cornea.29

Maqui Berry Extract Protects Eyes and Promotes Tears

Japanese scientists were the first to discover the effects of a standardized extract of maqui berry (Aristotelia chilensis).

Maqui is native to a few regions of Chile and southern Argentina,23,24 and contains compounds that help prevent low-grade injury to the lacrimal glands, enhancing their ability to make tears.5 These compounds are called delphinidins, and they fall into the anthocyanin family of plant extracts that are known to fight oxidative damage.

Delphinidins provide two potent eye-protecting activities. First, they shield the eye structures from the constant exposure to reactive oxygen species. Second, they inhibit damage from light stimulation to the eye’s delicate tissues, such as the photoreceptor cells.25

Animal research has also found that delphinidins in maqui berries can restore tear production by the lacrimal glands.5 For this study, scientists created a rat model of dry eye by suppressing the animals’ blink reflex in order to allow excessive evaporation from the eye surface. One group of rats was pretreated with maqui berry extract, while the other served as the control.

In the end, pretreatment with maqui berry extract significantly prevented the loss of tears that was observed in the control group. Despite the suppressed blink reflex, the animals pretreated with maqui berry extract retained clear eyes with no new corneal damage throughout the study. Untreated controls experienced considerable corneal damage from the extended dry-eye periods.5

What You Need to Know

Reversing Dry Eye Syndrome

Dry eye syndrome—increasingly common and driven by numerous factors in modern life—causes more than discomfort and over time, it can expose the eye to serious damage.
Too little production of either the watery layer, or the oily layer, of tear film results in too-rapid evaporation of tears.
Scientists have discovered that a single oral capsule of maqui berry extract taken daily boosts natural, high-quality tear production within 30 days, providing lasting relief and eye protection.
Omega-3 fatty acids have been shown to support the tear-production benefits of maqui berry extract by slowing tear evaporation from the eyes.
Taken together, these two nutrients address two of the key underlying characteristics of dry eye syndrome.

Maqui Berry Validated in Human Studies

Next, scientists designed a study to determine whether maqui berry extract could enhance tear production and improve eye comfort in humans suffering from dry eyes.6

They selected 13 healthy volunteers with moderately dry eyes, according to Schirmer’s test—which is a way to assess the amount of fluid produced by the tear glands and whether it is sufficient to keep the eyes moist.30 All participants took either 30 or 60 mg of maqui berry extract daily.6

After 30 days, both doses resulted in an approximately 50% improvement in tear production.

After 60 days, the 60 mg dose proved compellingly more effective for long-term use, delivering a sustained 45% improvement in tear production—while tear production in the 30 mg dose fell around halfway back toward baseline levels.6

This clarified that 60 mg of maqui berry extract daily can help reverse dry eye conditions, which are associated with burning, eye fatigue, sensitivity to light, blurred vision, and other symptoms.6

Surprising Causes of Dry Eye Syndrome

In 2016, scientists found that dry eye symptoms are greater in diabetics.31

Another recent study showed that pregnancy can reduce tear production.32

In 2016, BMJ Open published research demonstrating that higher blood levels of mercury were significantly associated with dry eye symptoms.33

Over 85% of HIV patients were found to have dry eye symptoms in another 2016 study, which also named radiation, infection, and smoking as potential causes.34

Other identified causes of dry eye symptoms include birth control pills, menopause, breastfeeding, antidepressants, antihistamines, diuretics and blood pressure drugs, decongestants, antianxiety agents, Bell’s palsy, thyroid dysfunction, rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, and Sjögren’s syndrome.35

Regardless of the cause, recent studies have discovered that maqui berry extracts and omega-3 fatty acids can help prevent and reverse dry eyes by helping the body naturally maintain both the quantity—and quality—of tears.

Quality-of-Life Improvements

Using the same subjects, the study team conducted quality-of-life measurements.

All patients completed the standard Dry Eye-Related Quality of Life Score (DEQS) test. This is a reliable questionnaire that consists of 15 items related to the influence of dry-eye syndrome on daily life, including its mental aspect. The overall degree of impairment to quality of life is calculated as a score—with a lower score indicating a greater quality of life.

Both dosing groups had a total composite score—eye and daily-life symptoms—of about 40 at the outset of the study. Scores for both groups fell quickly after treatment with maqui berry extract began. Patients taking 30 mg of maqui berry extract daily experienced a reduction (improvement) to a score of almost 22 (from a baseline of 40) in their scores after 30 days. However, their score didn’t drop much further by day 60.6

The score for patients taking 60 mg of maqui berry extract daily dropped to almost 27 after 30 days. In contrast to the lower (30 mg) dose group, the dry eye score of those taking 60 mg of maqui continued to fall after 60 days to an astoundingly low 11 points. This constitutes a 72% improvement in quality-of-life symptoms after just two months!6

This greater long-term improvement in quality of life for those taking 60 mg daily parallels the longer-lasting boost in tear production with the same dose in the same patients in the other part of the study.6

This study underscores maqui berry extract’s clear superiority to eye drops in improving tear fluid production, eye comfort, and quality of life.

Additional Support with Omega-3s

Recent evidence demonstrates that supplementation with omega-3 fatty acids can also help improve dry eye symptoms. Different from maqui berry extracts, which increase the body’s production of tears, omega-3s help combat dry eyes by slowing tear evaporation from the eyes.

A 2016 study found that omega-3s—when taken for 12 weeks as part of a formula that also provided vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants—reduced a wide range of dry eye symptoms including stinging, conjunctiva redness, scratchiness, blurred vision, and painful and tired eyes. The study author concluded that:

“Oral omega-3 fatty acids supplementation was an effective treatment for dry eye symptoms.”36

In another study on omega-3s by themselves, patients with dry eye syndrome took 500 mg of omega-3 fatty acids (325 mg EPA and 175 mg DHA) twice a day for three months. Compared to a placebo, the supplemented patients demonstrated on average a nearly 20-fold increase in tear-film breakup time (the time it takes for tears to disperse) and a more than 4-fold improvement in symptom scores.37

Tear-film breakup time is critical because when it is less than the blinking rate, the eyes suffer intermittent but repeated periods of exposure, producing symptoms of dry eye syndrome and—in addition to the discomfort—potentially injuring the eye.1,37,38

A third study confirmed that omega-3s improve tear-film breakup time and also enhance oily tear secretions, as measured by Schirmer’s test.39

These findings suggest that omega-3 fatty acids support the meibomian glands, which produce the vital lipid layer of the tear film and prevent overly rapid tear evaporation. Omega-3s, therefore, appear to be the perfect complement to maqui berry extract, which supports enhanced production of the aqueous (watery) layer of the tear film.

Are Your Eyes Dangerously Dry?

The following is a list of possible symptoms that can be indicative of dry eye syndrome:40

Eye redness
Stinging
Burning
“Foreign body” sensation
Blurred vision
“Eyelid heaviness” sensation
Eye fatigue
Feeling of being distracted by eye dryness and fatigue
Difficulty reading, and,
Episodes of excess tears following very dry eye periods.

Summary

Dry eye syndrome is an increasingly common condition that causes discomfort and reduced quality of life in the short-term and that can damage eye tissue in the long-term.

A sufficient amount of tears and a healthy quality of the tear film are essential for protecting the cornea from infection and delivering critical nutrients. Damage and inflammation caused by dry eyes leads to further tear reduction, creating a vicious cycle.

A natural, orally-administered extract of the maqui berry has been shown to soothe eyes from the inside out by stimulating healthy tear production and enhancing eye comfort. For additional support, omega-3 fatty acids have been found to help slow tear evaporation from the eye.

Together, these two nutrients help combat the key characteristics of dry eye syndrome.

If you have any questions on the scientific content of this article, please call a Life Extension® Wellness Specialist at 1-866-864-3027.


https://www.lifeextension.com/...rse-dry-eye-syndrome

Product:

https://www.lifeextension.com/...ort-with-maquibright


41
 
Posts: 11828 | Location: Herndon, VA | Registered: June 11, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
SIGforum Official
Eye Doc
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posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by maxxpower:
Went to the appointment and was given 4 trial options:

- Alcon Dailies AquaComfort Plus (Toric)
- Bausch & Lomb Bio true Daily (Toric)
- Bausch & Lomb Bio true Daily (non Toric)
- Alcon Dailies Total 1 (non Toric)

Both of the Torics were unwearable for me and have been ruled out.

The Bio true lenses are 78% water and the Alcon Dailies are 33% water, both are very nice but somewhat different.

The Alcon Dailies Total seem heavier in my eyes and are harder to take out and do not cause any dryness.

The Bio true lenses are lighter and easy to take out but seem to dry out a bit with extended screen time.

I am leaning towards the Alcon Dailies Total but haven't fully decided......


.


For the Total One, use dry fingers to remove, not moist. Way easier.
 
Posts: 2935 | Location: (Occupied) Northern Minnesota | Registered: June 24, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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