Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I’ve found my tribe! I wear soft lenses and my vision just isn’t clear. Even with soft lenses, I have terrible dry eye. I have to wear readers on top of my contacts. I hate my glasses because even with the titanium frames and the lightweight lenses, they are still so heavy.
At my last appt, I asked about lens replacement. I’m not there yet but I’m starting to do the research.
Have you tried Acuvue Oasys dailies? Best contact lenses for dry eyes!
Anonymous wrote:Btw Dr. Vu-Gia is a Caucasian woman. I didn't expect that. I thought she was Asian.
Anonymous wrote:I think I’ve found my tribe! I wear soft lenses and my vision just isn’t clear. Even with soft lenses, I have terrible dry eye. I have to wear readers on top of my contacts. I hate my glasses because even with the titanium frames and the lightweight lenses, they are still so heavy.
At my last appt, I asked about lens replacement. I’m not there yet but I’m starting to do the research.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't realize how fortunate I was until reading this thread.
At 53, I wear gas perm lenses 16 hrs a day, everyday. My eyes actually feel better once I put them in my eyes in the mornings than they do before I put them in. I constantly have my reading glasses around or on my head. That's annoying. I just really dread glasses, so I'm holding off as long as possible.
I would be careful. I'm the PP above with no symptoms of dry eyes but disappearing glands and the alarmed doctor. Your eyes need oxygen. It's great that you find contacts comfortable (I do too) but you could still be damaging your eyes and leading to dry eye problems later. I would give your eyes a break.
RGPs cover a much smaller part of the eyeball than soft lenses. So RGPs, by design, allow much more oxygen on the eye.
Anonymous wrote:I had -9 astigmastism over 15 years ago. I had the thickest glasses ever, even after thinning it out. They had contact lens for that. I'm sure they have better ones now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't realize how fortunate I was until reading this thread.
At 53, I wear gas perm lenses 16 hrs a day, everyday. My eyes actually feel better once I put them in my eyes in the mornings than they do before I put them in. I constantly have my reading glasses around or on my head. That's annoying. I just really dread glasses, so I'm holding off as long as possible.
I would be careful. I'm the PP above with no symptoms of dry eyes but disappearing glands and the alarmed doctor. Your eyes need oxygen. It's great that you find contacts comfortable (I do too) but you could still be damaging your eyes and leading to dry eye problems later. I would give your eyes a break.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't realize how fortunate I was until reading this thread.
At 53, I wear gas perm lenses 16 hrs a day, everyday. My eyes actually feel better once I put them in my eyes in the mornings than they do before I put them in. I constantly have my reading glasses around or on my head. That's annoying. I just really dread glasses, so I'm holding off as long as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nice to hear from others. I have a -9 and-6.5. I can't wear my dailies all day anymore and just wear glasses except for the random date night with my wife when I want to feel young again. And even then I need to use Oasys drops.
This is close to me. -9.5 and -8.5.
I was quite happy in contacts until early 40s when my eye dr. did a new test to show me my meibomian glands and said mine were almost gone. She was totally alarmed.
Anyway, it's been years, I was freaked out but now I have realized this is very common as we age and just have a regimen to hopefully prevent dry eye as long as possible. It means I only wear my dailys for special occasions, like once a month or so, and I do hot compresses every night to stimulate those glands, as well as blinking exercises during the day and yearly lipiflow (which is an expensive pain, but I've read it can rejuvenate glands).
No symptoms of dry eye but she scared me off contacts. I'm pretty happy in my glasses - I pay a lot to get the thinner lenses + all the bells and whistles (blue light and UV protection etc.).
So far I haven't needed much in the help of reading, just last year got very mild progressive lenses in my glasses.
Anonymous wrote:Nice to hear from others. I have a -9 and-6.5. I can't wear my dailies all day anymore and just wear glasses except for the random date night with my wife when I want to feel young again. And even then I need to use Oasys drops.