Objective: The study aimed to compare the visual performance of contact lenses with and without negative spherical aberration (SA) over 5 days of wear. Methods: At baseline, 32 myopic participants (aged 18-33 years) were fitted in a randomized order with two lenses (test lens with minimal or no SA and 1-Day Acuvue Moist designed with negative SA) for 5 days (minimum 6 hours wear/day). Participants returned for a follow-up visit. This consisted of on-axis SA measurements; high-and low-contrast visual acuities at 6 m; highcontrast acuities at 70 and 40 cm; low-illumination, low-contrast acuity at 6 m; stereopsis at 40 cm; horizontal phorias at 3 m and 33 cm; and ±2.00 D monocular accommodative facility at 33 cm. Participants also rated (1-10 scale) vision quality (clarity and lack of ghosting for distance, intermediate, near, driving vision and vision stability during day-and night-time), overall vision satisfaction, ocular comfort, and willingness to purchase (yes/no response). Results: 1-Day Acuvue Moist induced significantly (p<0.05) more negative SA at distance (Δ=0.078 μm) and near (Δ=0.064 μm) compared to the test lens, for a 6 mm pupil. There were no significant differences (p>0.05) in acuity, binocular vision, and all subjective metrics except vision stability between lenses where the test lens was rated to provide more stable vision (p<0.05). Conclusion: Contrary to expectations, incorporating negative SA in single vision soft contact lenses did not improve visual performance in non-presbyopic adult myopes.
CITATION STYLE
Kho, D., Fedtke, C., Tilia, D., Diec, J., Sha, J., Thomas, V., & Bakaraju, R. C. (2018). Effects of relative negative spherical aberration in single vision contact lens visual performance. Clinical Optometry, 10, 9–17. https://doi.org/10.2147/OPTO.S142952
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