Comparative physiologic performance of polymethyl methacrylate and gas-permeable contact lenses
D. Fonn, B. A. Holden, P. Roth, G. Gooley and J. Kenefick
A short-term study of the physiologic response of the cornea to polymethyl
methacrylate (PMMA) contact lenses and hard, gas-permeable contact lenses
of different materials (polycon and Menicon 02), thicknesses, and fittings,
was carried out on nine unadapted subjects using one eye as the
experimental eye and the other as the control eye (no lens). Changes in
corneal thickness were monitored at seven locations across the cornea using
an electronic micropachymeter. It was found that gas-permeable lenses
produced less corneal swelling than the PMMA lenses. However, lens
thickness and the fit of the lens were still important control variables
with these gas-permeable lenses. The thin gas-permeable lens produced less
swelling than thicker lenses, and the flatter fitting gas-permeable lenses
produced less swelling than the steeper fitting lenses. The swelling with
all the hard lenses studied was confined primarily to the central 6 mm of
the cornea.