ANA Discussion Forum
Post-Treatment => Eye Issues => Topic started by: robinstwo on October 05, 2008, 08:05:45 am
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I have been wearing contacts for 30 years and wear one in my good eye. Haven't been brave enough to try it in my nonblinking eye yet. I was wondering is anyone wearing a contact in their nonblinking eye and how far out from surgery did you start waering the contact in the nonblinking eye?
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I think this question is best put to your ophthalmologist, but the Bell's Palsy InfoSite has the following excerpt in their page on eye protection:
CONTACT LENSES
Contact lenses are hydrophilic (hold water). They can provide a source of moisture directly over the cornea, and help protect the eye from injury due to debris. The eyelids help to hold a contact lens in place. If the lids become limp, contacts cannot be worn until function begins to return. Important notes of caution: Wearing the lens helps, but it is not a complete replacement for your tears - use plenty of saline or eye drops designed for use with contacts. At the acute stage, the eye can be so dry that it is impossible to keep a contact lens moist for more than a few minutes at a time. In this situation, contacts can not be worn.
**DO NOT LET THE LENS DRY OUT! A dry contact directly over the cornea is dangerous. This is very important - IF YOU CANNOT KEEP THE LENS MOIST, DO NOT WEAR IT! **
See http://www.bellspalsy.ws/eye.htm for more information.
Sara
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Thanks for the link. Guess I'll have to wait longer before I try. 8)