Contact lenses are a fashion accessory as well as a medical correction/prevention measure against certain eye defects. Among Nigerians, they are now a fashion statement as it is not uncommon to peer into someone’s eyes to see a green, brown, or even blue iris. Therefore, this news item might interest you especially if you wear one or know someone who does.
Contact lens wearers are at the mercy of a bug that is found in tap water and gnaws through the eyeballs causing blindness, scientists have warned.
With the Acanthamoeba parasite also found in dust, in the sea and in showers and swimming pools, millions of people are at risk worldwide, including Britain’s 3.7million contact lens users. The actual number of infections is small but treatment is long, painful and not completely effective, meaning some Britons are left blind every year.
Fiona Henriquez, of the University of the West of Scotland, said: ‘It is a potential problem for every single contact lens wearer.’
Professor Craig Roberts, of the Strathclyde University, who is working with Dr Henriquez to produce better contact lens cleaning solutions, said: ‘It’s absolutely everywhere.’
The British Science Festival in Aberdeen heard that Acanthamoeba, a tiny single-celled parasite, feeds on bacteria found on dirty contact lenses and cases.
When the lens is put in the eye, it starts to eat its way through the cornea, the outer layer of the eyeball and breeding as it goes. Symptoms include itchy and watery eyes, blurred vision, sensitivity to light, swelling of the upper eyelid and extreme pain.
Vision can be permanently damaged within a week, said Graeme Stevenson, an optician. ‘Generally it leaves you with scarring. Your cornea is your window on life and if the infection penetrates in towards the third layer you are left with scarring, with a kind of frosty windscreen.’
He added that many of the 75 infections recorded each year in the UK occur because people fail to follow the instructions they are given by their optician. ‘Usually a lot of it is non-compliance. It’s patients rinsing their case out in tap water or rinsing their lenses out in tap water. Potentially something as simple as swimming or showering while wearing their lenses increases the risk significantly.’
Advice for avoiding the bug includes keeping lenses and cases clean and replacing them regularly.
Great article, I would like to study my favorite.