3 Tips for Dry Eyes

3 Tips for Dry Eyes

Why is blinking so important?

Every time you blink, you restore tear film across the surface of your eye. Light needs to pass through your eye smoothly. If your tear film is broken up, your vision is not clear. Tear film also acts as a barrier, protects your cornea and provides nutrition for the underlying structure.

Why do you experience dry eyes when using the screen for long?

When you’re concentrated on near work, you blink less. The average blink rate is 8-21 blinks per minute. Studies show that individuals blink approximately 60 percent less when using a computer.

This decrease in blink rate may be a result of serious concentration on the task at hand, or a relatively limited range of eye movement.  

When you blink less, your tear film is replenished less frequently and evaporates more quickly, causing ocular discomfort such as blurred vision, dry eyes, light sensitivity, watery eyes or a stinging sensation.

Unfortunately, there is no cure for dry eyes. However, you can still manage its symptoms. Here are 3 tips to avoid dry eyes or relieve your dry eyes:

 Tip 1: Adjusting your environment

Whether you are working in the comfort of your own home or clocking in hours at the office, the lack of moisture in your surrounding environment can cause irritation to the eyes as its surface starts to dry out. Having a humidifier near your workspace would be a great asset as it adds moisture to the air, thus providing better air quality and keeping your eyes hydrated!

Also, while using your computer or electronic gadgets, remember to adjust the brightness of your computer screen to match the light intensity of your surrounding environment to reduce eye strain.  

Tip 2: Applying Eye Drops and Using Eyelid Wipes

Artificial tears, also known as eye drops, help in maintaining eye surface moisture by providing lubrication to the eye.

Did you know that there are two different types of eye drops? 

  1. Preservative-free
    These eye drops come in single-use vials and can only be used within 24 hours of opening it.

Refresh Plus® Lubricant Eye Drops

Refresh Plus® Lubricant Eye Drops deliver extended protection and high-performance dry eye symptom relief that lasts. 

  • Designed to provide fast and long-lasting relief with an intelligent delivery system. It provides minimal blurring and immediate comfort.
  • Compatible with contact lens wear.
  • Preservative-free option for sensitive eyes.

2. Regular use

Unlike preservative-free eye drops, regular use eye drops have preservatives added to them in order to extend their shelf life.  

SYSTANE® ULTRA Lubricant Eye Drops

Similar to Systane Ultra Unit Dose, Systane Ultra is designed to provide fast and long lasting relief with intelligent delivery system. It provides minimal blurring and immediate comfort.

  • Systane Ultra is contact lens compatible.
  • Can be kept for 6 months after opening. Making it more cost-effective.

Refresh Tears® Lubricant Eye Drops

  • Ideal first line recommendation since it works on all dry eye types.
  • For consumers looking for first time eye drop, or looking for a better upgrade.
  • Other than applying eye drops, using eyelid wipes also help to relieve dry eyes, as these wipes help to cleanse the eyelids and lashes and support their natural eye lubricating functions.

SYSTANE® Lid Wipes

  • Hypoallergenic, pre-moistened.
  • Gently removes oily residues and cleanses.
  • For daily lid hygiene and to wipe infectious or oily eye lids.
  • Also removes make-up.

Tip: Bring some eye drops and eyelid wipes with you while on the go. You’ll never know when you need them!

Tip 3: Eye Vitamins

If you wish to rely less on eye drops, eye vitamins are a good and natural replacement to keep your eyes healthy too. Eye vitamins can:

  • Protects against sensation of dry eyes.
  • For dry eye sufferers who want to reduce reliance on eye drops. 
  • Contains vitamins, zinc, borage oil, omega 3 and alpha lipoic acid to improve the nutrition of the cornea and maintain a comfortable tear film.

If you are still experiencing severe visual discomfort after taking steps to adjust your environment and enhance your diet, we suggest you take a comprehensive eye exam to do a thorough check of your eyes and rule out any serious conditions that could potentially lead to blindness.  

See the recommended frequency of eye exams here:

Haven’t done a comprehensive eye exam before, or in the past year?

3 Ways to Protect Yourself from Blue Light

3 Ways to Protect Yourself from Blue Light

What is Blue light?

Sunlight contains red, orange, yellow, green and blue light rays. Each of these individual rays have their respective energies and wavelengths.

Source: Points de Vue

Blue light is a colour in the visible light spectrum that can be seen by the human eye.  Located at the beginning of the visible spectrum, it includes harmful blue-violet radiations (415-455 nm) as well as beneficial blue-turquoise radiations (465-495 nm), involved in normal metabolic functioning in humans.

Blue light is Everywhere!

Blue light is everywhere – it is not only present in sunlight, but also in artificial and man-made light.  Most notably, the backlit displays of digital devices such as smartphones, computers and electronic notebooks, which are now used very frequently by people of all ages, emit significant amounts of blue light.

Blue light can be both good and harmful

Being exposed to blue light in the daytime is crucial in the regulation of the circadian rhythm – the body’s natural sleep-wake cycle. It also helps to boost alertness, aids memory and cognitive function and also elevates mood.

However, overexposure to blue light, especially late at night, has detrimental effects. Blue light emitted from smartphones and other digital devices can decrease contrast, leading to digital eye strain, leading to irritated or sore eyes, headaches, as well as difficulty focusing. Additionally, studies suggest that prolonged exposure to blue light over a period of time could lead to damaged retinal cells, which can increase the risk of age-related macular degeneration. Exposure to blue light right before sleeping at night also disrupts your natural sleep-wake cycle and hurts the quality of your sleep.

What can you do to protect your eyes from blue light?

In today’s digital age, prolonged usage of electronic devices is becoming a norm in our daily lives. Most people spend at least 12 hours a day consuming some form of media, yet it only takes as little as two hours in front of a screen to cause digital eye strain. Additionally, nearly 60% of people use their smartphones right before and after bed.

As prolonged exposure to blue light is close to unavoidable for many, the following are ways to reduce your exposure to harmful blue light:

1) Blue light filters 

A convenient, wallet-friendly and hassle-free way to reduce your blue light exposure while using electronic devices is to use blue light filters. These filters serve to prevent significant amounts of blue light from reaching your eyes without compromising on the visibility of the backlit display, and can be used for smartphones, tablets, and computer screens.

2) Blue light blocking/digital booster lenses 

Did you know that there are two types of lenses that have been developed to reduce blue light transmission to the eye?

  • Blue light blocking lenses

These lenses filter out blue light by blocking the transmission of a specific range of wavelengths and absorbing just the right amount of blue light. Blue light filters can either be built inside and incorporated into the lenses, or applied as an additional layer of coating on the lenses.

By blocking up to 50% of harmful blue light, our Signature Blue Light Protect lenses can help to protect your eyes without any colour distortions.

  • Digital boosters

In addition to filtering out blue light, digital boosters also relax our eyes in front of digital screens, reducing digital eye strain through an additional power zone which provides greater comfort and focusing support.

Essilor’s Crizal Eyezen™: Lenses for Digitally Connected People

Available in both prescription glasses and non-prescription glasses, Crizal Eyezen filters out harmful blue light and helps you to see more comfortably regardless of the size of screens (including the smaller ones) and the distance between the screen and your eyes. 

Source: Essilor SG

Essilor’s Crizal Eyezen™ boasts the following features:

  • Eyezen™ Focus provides extra focusing support with the additional power zone
  • Light Scan® filter out harmful blue violet light while letting beneficial blue turquoise light to pass through
  • W.A.V.E Technology™ provides sharp vision via fine tuned lens surface

3) Practise good eye health habits

Decrease the amount of time spent in front of these screens and take frequent breaks to give your eyes a rest by practising the 20-20-20 rule to relax your eyes. Maintain an appropriate distance between the digital screen and your eyes.

20-20-20 Rule: Every 20 minutes look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds.

In addition, put your phone away at least 30 minutes before you sleep to prevent your sleep quality from being negatively affected. The longer the time you disconnect from your electronic devices before you sleep,

How to Sanitise your Eyewear in the COVID-19 Era

How to Sanitise your Eyewear in the COVID-19 Era

Guest post by Jeff Herman, chief editor of AllAboutVision.com

Your new hand-washing habit can help you to keep your glasses and contact lenses free of viruses and germs in this coronavirus pandemic … but don’t even think of reaching for a sanitizing wipe to clean your glasses.

There is a right way and a wrong way to disinfect your spectacles. Soap and water are good, sanitizing wipes (which are still hard to find on store shelves) are bad.

How to care for your contact lenses now? It’s really no different than before (but more on that later).

How to keep your glasses germ- and virus-free

Health officials around the world advise not touching your face to reduce the risk of transmitting the coronavirus to your eyes, nose and mouth. Another way to lower your odds of contracting coronavirus is to keep your specs spotless.

What’s the best way to wash your glasses? We asked optometrist Chui Wen Juan, of C C Chui Optical in Singapore, for the do’s and don’ts for ridding your glasses of contagions — as well as everyday dirt, grime and sweat.

“The safest way to clean spectacles is to use soap and water,” Chui says. “Thorough washing eliminates pathogens — bacteria, virus, fungi — and also body fluids such as perspiration, saliva, sebum (skin oil) that can harbour or encourage growth of pathogens.”

“Most hand soaps and liquid non-abrasive detergents can be used, along with cool — not cold — or tepid — not hot — water,” she adds.  

‘’The added advantage of using soap and water to wash the spectacles is that the hands are also being cleaned at the same time,” Chui says. “In fact, if your hands are dirty or greasy, you should wash them before cleaning your spectacles.”

And the don’ts?

“Avoid bath gels or soap with lanolin and sorbolene, as these will leave a film over the spectacles’ lenses,” Chui says.

“Avoid abrasive cleaners — those for polishing ovens and stoves — or acetone-type cleaners — nail polish remover, for example — as these will damage coatings on the lenses or the paintwork of the frames,” she adds.

For the same reasons, sanitizing or disinfecting wipes should never be used to clean your glasses.

“Sanitizing wipes often contain alcohol, which may be damaging to certain types of plastics in spectacle lenses or frames,” Chui says. “Sanitizing wipes may also contain emollients to keep the skin moisturised, but will leave a film on the spectacle lenses.”

Be gentle when washing and drying your glasses

One difference between your hand-washing and glasses-washing habits: Wash your hands thoroughly and with vigor but be gentle when washing your spectacles. The last thing you want is to break your lenses and have trouble getting a repair because your optical shop is closed.

Take it easy when drying your glasses too.

“Use the microfibre cloth — which is usually provided with your spectacles — to gently dry your spectacles,” Chui says. “Most spectacle lenses will come with water-repellent coatings, so you’ll find that very little water actually remains on the lenses, so there is no need to rub it aggressively.”

And how often should you clean your glasses? 

“An easy rule of thumb to remember is to wash your spectacles as often as you would wash your face,” “After all, would one put dirty spectacles on a cleaned face?”

Chui Wen Juan, Optometrist, C C Chui Optical

“Perhaps it might be most helpful and convenient to wash the spectacles in the morning, to start the day with clean and clear spectacles.”

Two more tips to lower your odds of transmitting coronavirus from your glasses to your face, eyes, nose or mouth:

“Make sure your spectacles are well-fitted,” Chui says. “If they are loose or uncomfortable, the wearer will have a tendency to touch them more often, which means spectacles get dirtier more quickly and there is also a risk of infection when touching the face with contaminated hands and fingers.”

“Remember also to wash the microfibre cloth for spectacles about once a week (more if heavily used),” she adds. “Simply use soap and water, and avoid fabric softeners.”

How to take care of your contact lenses

If you wear contact lenses, how can you ensure you’re doing all the right things in the lens-cleaning process to cut your COVID-19 risk?

“The first golden rule of wearing contact lenses has always been — even pre-COVID-19 — to wash and dry hands thoroughly before handling contact lenses,” Chui says.

“There are many types of cleaners and disinfectants for contact lenses,” she says. “Most of the commercially available ones have been tested to FDA standards, but must be used correctly to have maximum efficacy.”  

Your contact lens practitioner will advise you on how to care for your contact lenses, as certain disinfecting products may be more compatible with certain types of soft contact lenses.

“Last but not least, contact lens practitioners have always advised wearers not to wear contact lenses when unwell — for example, if you have the cold or flu — or if your eyes are sore,” Chui says. “Even though contact lenses did not cause the primary problem (colds and flu), it may exacerbate the symptoms of sore eyes (that occasionally accompanies respiratory illnesses).”

Reusing contaminated contact lenses and lens cases may delay recovery of the illness or cause a reinfection, she adds. If contact lenses were being used just before an episode of illness, it is best to discard those used lenses and lens cases and start fresh following recovery.

Why you should be extra mindful of your eyewear now

“As many places face lockdown and operating restrictions, it is all the more important to keep your eyewear safe, because it may be inconvenient to get repairs or replacements done,” Chui says.

“It is always safer to keep spectacles in the case when not in use, to mitigate accidental mishandling by young children, pets or the family member who unwittingly sat on your spectacles,” she adds. “Avoid placing spectacles, even for a brief moment, on chairs, beds, sofas, the floor — anywhere spectacles are least expected to be.”  

“In doing all these, not only will you save yourself unnecessary inconvenience, but you’ll also extend the life of your eyewear … and save your wallet.”

All About Vision, based in the United States, now has websites in Spanish, French, Portuguese and Hindi serving readers in Latin America, Canada, Brazil, India and the United Kingdom. In May, All About Vision launched a website for Australia.

Chui Wen Juan, is a second-generation optometrist from C C Chui Optical with 17 years experience. She trained and practised in Australia before returning to her family’s practice in Singapore. C C Chui Optical is now serving the 3rd generation of clients since its establishment in 1976.

What is Presbyopia?

What is Presbyopia?

“Though presbyopia is a normal change in our eyes as we age, it often is a significant and emotional event because it’s a sign of aging that’s impossible to ignore and difficult to hide.”

— Gretchyn Bailey, NCLC, FAAO, Eye Health Contributor

Do not worry, presbyopia is a normal process of our eyes ageing. It is an age-related condition that results in the progressive loss of our eyes’ ability to focus clearly on nearby objects. It eventually affects everyone – people who do not have pre-existing eye conditions and even those who are already farsighted or nearsighted. According to researchers, an estimated nearly two billion people in the world have presbyopia.

What causes Presbyopia?

Presbyopia is caused by the natural aging of the lens in our eyes. As we age, the lens in our eyes hardens and becomes less flexible, and gradually loses its ability to change shape to focus on close objects.

What are the symptoms of presbyopia?

  • Blurry vision at reading distance that used to be comfortable.
  • Holding objects or reading materials further away from your eyes to see more clearly
  • Brighter light needed to see clearly
  • Headaches and eye strain when focusing up-close

If you have experienced any of the above symptoms, please do an eye exam to seek professional advice and get a better understanding of your eyes’ condition. If you are above the age of 40 but have not experienced any of the symptoms, it is still recommended that you do eye exams regularly to ensure good vision in the long run.


Sources:

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