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. 2022 Aug 2;12(8):1177.
doi: 10.3390/life12081177.

The Effects of Soft Contact Lens Wear on The Tear Film and Meibomian Gland Drop-Out and Visibility

Affiliations

The Effects of Soft Contact Lens Wear on The Tear Film and Meibomian Gland Drop-Out and Visibility

José Vicente García-Marqués et al. Life (Basel). .

Abstract

As contact lens (CL) wear affects the ocular surface, this cross-sectional study aims to assess the effects of soft CL wear and its duration on the tear film and meibomian gland (MG) drop-out and visibility. Thirty non-CL wearers (22.5 ± 2.3 years) and twenty-four soft CL wearers (23.8 ± 2.2 years) participated in this study. The Keratograph 5M was used to assess the ocular surface. CL users were surveyed on years of CL wear and hours per week. MG visibility was assessed using a previously developed method based on analysing pixel intensity of meibographies. The CL group showed higher gland drop-out (p < 0.001) and lower gland visibility (p < 0.022). Gland drop-out was independently associated with CL wear (p = 0.006). When gland drop-out was excluded, the relative energy of pixel intensity values showed an independent association with CL wear (p = 0.005). Prolonged hours of CL wear were associated with higher dry eye symptoms and entropy of MGs (p < 0.029). A reduction in non-invasive keratograph break-up time was associated with using CLs for ≥8 years (p = 0.030). Overall, gland drop-out was higher and gland visibility lower in soft CL wearers. New gland visibility metrics might help to assess MGs in soft CL wearers quickly and objectively.

Keywords: contact lens; dry eye; meibomian gland dysfunction; meibomian glands; objective medical image analysis; ocular surface; tear film.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict to interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Meibography without image processing (top left), meibography after image processing (top right) and histogram of grey level intensity pixels of the processed meibography (down).

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