New Contact Lenses Pack Vitamin E, Could Replace Eye Drops

Blue Color Contact Lens {{es|Lentes de contact...
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A new contact lens loaded with vitamin E could do away with eye drops.

The lenses could be used to deliver eye drops for glaucoma and cataracts, as well as less serious problems such as dry eyes, inflammation, and bacterial infections.

The problem with eye drops is that only a small amount (1 to 5 percent) of the drug actually gets to the cornea – a clear film covering the iris – the place it needs to go to do its job, said Anuj Chauhan, professor of chemical engineering at the University of Florida.

For eye problems like glaucoma, which can require several different eye-drop drugs taken two to three times daily, switching out lenses can be cumbersome.

Using contact lenses to more effectively deliver medicine to eyes isn’t a new concept. However, with today’s drug-loaded lenses “what happens is the drug comes out very very quickly, in about one hour or so,” Chauhan told TechNewsDaily.

The new medicated lenses solve this problem by using vitamin E to construct a chemical wall that prevents other medicines from just pouring out into the eye all at once.

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Here’s how it works:  The vitamin forms barriers, what the researchers refer to as “nanobricks,” that the drug must maneuver around before entering the eye.

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