The principal hypothesis is to be tested in this work is that vision stability (the primary outcome measure) with a spherical contact lens correction vs. a toric contact lens correction will be the same.
This will be a randomised, subject-masked, crossover, bilateral non-dispensing study, controlled by cross-comparison. Thirty subjects will use each lens type at a single visit in random sequence.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
27
Subjects will be randomized to wear test lenses for 30 minutes, and then cross-over to control lenses.
Subjects will be randomized to wear control lenses for 30 minutes, and then cross-over to test lenses.
Eurolens Research
Manchester, United Kingdom
Vision Stability While Doing Tasks on Mobile Phone
Vision stability was assessed by study subjects while doing tasks on mobile phone using a 0-100 visual analogue scales (0 - Unacceptable. Lens cannot be worn, 100 - Excellent. Unaware of any visual loss)
Time frame: 30 minutes
Vision Stability While Doing Tasks on Desktop
Vision stability was assessed by study subjects while doing tasks on desktop using a 0-100 visual analogue scales (0 - Unacceptable. Lens cannot be worn, 100 - Excellent. Unaware of any visual loss)
Time frame: 30 minutes
Vision Stability While Walking
Vision stability was assessed by study subjects while walking using a 0-100 visual analogue scales (0 - Unacceptable. Lens cannot be worn, 100 - Excellent. Unaware of any visual loss)
Time frame: 30 minutes
Lens Fit for Test Contact Lens
Lens fit was assessed for lens rotation after 10 minutes for toric fit. Lens mislocation from optimal position was measured in 0°, 1-5°, 6-10°, 11-15°, 16-20°, More than 20°.
Time frame: 10 minutes
Lens Fit
Lens fit was assessed as either 'acceptable' or 'not acceptable' for standard fit by study investigator.
Time frame: 30 minutes
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