Telescopic contact lens shows promise for AMD
Date: Feb-16-2015 An innovation that combines a telescopic contact lens with "smart" glasses
that look like normal eyewear looks set to be a great help to people with serious
vision problems, such as age-related macular degeneration.
The telescopic contact lens magnifies 2.8 times.
Image credit: EPFL
While current see-through wearable displays that improve poor vision are
available, they are clunky, impractical and people do not like using them in social
situations.
The team of academic and private developers behind the new zoomable lens and
glasses combination hopes that their invention - which is soon to enter clinical
trials - will be a more attractive option.
Estimates suggest that worldwide, there are around 285 million people with serious
vision problems, including age-related macular degeneration (AMD) - a painless eye
condition that results in gradual loss of central vision and is the leading cause of
blindness in older people in the Western world.
One of the developers of the new contact lens and glasses combination is Eric
Tremblay, an optics specialist at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
(EPFL) - one of the two Federal Institutes of Technology of Switzerland. He worked
with Joe Ford at the University of California-San Diego, and other
collaborators.
Tremblay recently unveiled a new prototype of his telescopic contact lens - the
first of its kind - at the AAAS Annual Meeting in San Jose, CA, last week.
At the meeting, Tremblay also presented the smart glasses that are worn with the
telescopic contact lenses. They allow the wearer to control the zoom feature of the
contact lens with eye blinks. The glasses are designed to recognize winks and ignore
blinks.
"We think these lenses hold a lot of promise for low vision and AMD," says Tremblay. He adds:
"It's very important and hard to strike a balance between function
and the social costs of wearing any kind of bulky visual device. There is a strong
need for something more integrated, and a contact lens is an attractive direction.
At this point this is still research, but we are hopeful it will eventually become a
real option for people with AMD."
Telescopic contact lens magnifies 2.8 times
The telescopic contact lens magnifies 2.8 times. Since the first prototype in
2013, the developers have been fine tuning the lens material so it can be worn
comfortably over longer periods. They have also been developing eyewear accessories
that look attractive.
The contact lens is 1.55 mm thick and has a very thin reflective telescope
inside. Tiny mirrors reflect the light, expanding and magnifying viewed objects so
what you see is similar to what you can see through low magnification
binoculars.
The contact lenses are scleral lenses - they are larger and more
rigid than many of the types of contact lenses people wear today. They are made from
several pieces of precision cut plastic, aluminum mirrors and polarizing thin
films, held together with biologically safe glues.
One of the challenges the team has been working on is making the lens more
breathable so the eye has a steady supply of oxygen. They designed the lens so it
has tiny air channels about 0.1 mm wide.
The developers are still working on improving oxygen permeability and image
quality, which they hope to achieve as they refine and increase their understanding
of the mechanical and manufacturing processes.
Glasses and contact lens use polarized light to select magnification
People with AMD may only need the contact lens. But people without AMD may prefer
to have magnification "on demand," which is why the developers are also working on
the glasses.
The glasses look like normal eyewear except they have a small light source
detector that recognizes winks and ignores blinks of the wearer's eyes. They wink
with the right eye for magnification and with the left eye to restore normal
vision.
In the magnification mode, the glasses polarize light one way, and in the
normal mode, they polarize it the other way. The contact lens is designed so that
one type of polarized light uses the 1x aperture, and the other type of polarization
uses the 2.8x aperture. Thus, the wearer sees the view where the polarization of the
glasses matches that of the contact lens aperture.
The research is funded by the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA).
Meanwhile, Medical News Today recently learned that another team is
developing a new eyeglass material that will allow the wearer to make their eyeglasses become shaded on command. The
idea is to give users more control over when their glasses darken, such as while
driving or wearing a hat - situations that current transitional lenses do not cope
with very well.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
Courtesy: Medical News Today
Note: Any medical information available in this news section is not intended as a substitute for informed medical
advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional.