Anonymous wrote:Where is offering stellest lenses? I thought they weren't available in the US yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Thank you. I cannot find anything online about Stellest except for one study out of China only 2 years ago....Will get a second opinion and use another store.
back in the 90s they had me get gas permeable lenses for that.
Anonymous wrote:OP: Thank you. I cannot find anything online about Stellest except for one study out of China only 2 years ago....Will get a second opinion and use another store.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just looked up Stellest. They are new since my DS started MiSight 2-3 years ago. The clinical data look good, and they got breakthrough approval from FDA.
How much are they quoting for these lenses? FWIW, MiSight was $1k the first year and $700 a year afterwards. Prices might change depending on the office you go to.
IMO, MiSight has been like a miracle. My DS' prescription hasn't changed since he started wearing them. He was a little young at 7 yo, so if Stellarest had been around, I might have done that first and then MiSight later if he got sick of glasses as he got older. The technology is the same - concentric circles of different refraction - it's just glasses vs. contacts. I can see how fitting the glasses could be more difficult because there are differences in head shape, where the glasses sit, etc. Whereas with contacts, they sit on the eye surface so there is less variability between people.
Let us know how it goes, OP. As someone with -12 contacts and -14 glasses, I am fascinated by this technology.
What! MiSight was $1k the first year and $700 a year afterwards!?
MiSight works for my DC well, too, but I pay $2,000 at the doctor's office in Chevy Chase, MD. Jealous! Which doctor do you go?
Anonymous wrote:We did the overnight contacts for myopia control starting when my son was 7. He’s now 20 and they still work well for him. He sees 20/20 during the day and sleeps in the contacts overnight. I’m extremely myopic and so glad to have spared him the worst of it.
Anonymous wrote:I just looked up Stellest. They are new since my DS started MiSight 2-3 years ago. The clinical data look good, and they got breakthrough approval from FDA.
How much are they quoting for these lenses? FWIW, MiSight was $1k the first year and $700 a year afterwards. Prices might change depending on the office you go to.
IMO, MiSight has been like a miracle. My DS' prescription hasn't changed since he started wearing them. He was a little young at 7 yo, so if Stellarest had been around, I might have done that first and then MiSight later if he got sick of glasses as he got older. The technology is the same - concentric circles of different refraction - it's just glasses vs. contacts. I can see how fitting the glasses could be more difficult because there are differences in head shape, where the glasses sit, etc. Whereas with contacts, they sit on the eye surface so there is less variability between people.
Let us know how it goes, OP. As someone with -12 contacts and -14 glasses, I am fascinated by this technology.
Anonymous wrote:Also here's a paper that reviews the existing literature including the first 2 years of the Stellerest 3 year study. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10076805/
Anonymous wrote:hi. My eye doctor said my 8 year old now needs glasses and because the change over the past year is dramatic, suggested Stellest lenses.
They are incredibly expensive and the pressure from the doctor to get them immediately from Lenscrafters gave me a wierd vibe....(the doctors office is next to lenscrafters).
Please let me know if your child has worn these and what your experience was.
Any other options for myopia control?
Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:I just looked up Stellest. They are new since my DS started MiSight 2-3 years ago. The clinical data look good, and they got breakthrough approval from FDA.
How much are they quoting for these lenses? FWIW, MiSight was $1k the first year and $700 a year afterwards. Prices might change depending on the office you go to.
IMO, MiSight has been like a miracle. My DS' prescription hasn't changed since he started wearing them. He was a little young at 7 yo, so if Stellarest had been around, I might have done that first and then MiSight later if he got sick of glasses as he got older. The technology is the same - concentric circles of different refraction - it's just glasses vs. contacts. I can see how fitting the glasses could be more difficult because there are differences in head shape, where the glasses sit, etc. Whereas with contacts, they sit on the eye surface so there is less variability between people.
Let us know how it goes, OP. As someone with -12 contacts and -14 glasses, I am fascinated by this technology.