Option #1: Over Spectacles
Description: Patients are fit with their normal distance only contact lens prescription. Reading glasses are worn over the contact lenses whenever it is necessary to read.
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This option provides the best possible vision at all
distances. Vision is crisp and binocular (both eyes work together).
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Patients have to wear glasses. Typically, this is not the
first choice for most contact lens wearers, because, understandably, they
do not want to wear glasses at all.
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Option #2: Bifocal Contact Lenses
Description: Patients are fit with either soft disposable or rigid gas permeable bifocal contact lenses.
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This option provides good distance vision, functional
near vision, and good binocular vision (both eyes work together). Patients
never need to wear glasses.
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Near vision is good enough to read small phone
book size print, but near vision is not as sharp when compared to any of
the other options. This is the most expensive option.
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Option #3: Monovision
Description: Patients are fit with single vision contact lenses. The patient's dominant eye is focused for the distance and the non-dominant eye is focused for near work.
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This option provides excellent vision for distance and near
vision. Near vision is sharper with monovision than it is with
bifocal contact lenses. Patients never need to wear glasses. Monovsion
is the least
expensive method to correct presbyopic patients with contact
lenses.
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Patients temporarily lose binocular vision and depth perception
while the monovision lenses are being worn. Since the eyes are not working
together as a team, patients have a more difficult time judging speed and
distance of moving objects. Monovision is a safe and popular method to
correct vision after age 40. However, first time monovision patients should
take extra caution driving for about one week. When driving, patients should
give other cars extra room while they adjust to the new lenses. The FAA
does no permit pilots to wear monovision lenses while flying. Patients
who have trouble with motion sickness may not be good candidates for monovision
lenses. |