The current state-of-the art in rotational stabilization includes back surface toricity (effective for rigid gas-permeable contact lenses), base-down and peri-ballast prism, or Dynamic Stabilization which is a modification of base-down prism. However, there are patients for whom one or none of the existing designs are sufficient to provide rotational stabilization for a contact lens and clear vision at multiple distance ranges.
Furthermore, in addition power contact lens, the distance to near transition is incredibly small—5 mm maximum total usable zone size. Thus, distance and near images may appear faintly in the opposite zone. Prismatic effects of the convention higher plus- and minus-shaped lenses will cause image jump and displacement.
Therefore, what is needed in the art are contact lenses that provide rotational stability and centration, that translate upwards in a downgaze through the interaction with the upper eyelid, that also include transition zones between different optical powers where prismatic effects are minimized.
The present disclosure relates to translating contact lenses that work when the cornea is spherical or toric. For rotational stabilization, the contact lenses disclosed herein have an advantage over base-down prism, peri-ballasting, and Dynamic Stabilization in that generally an interaction between a lenticular (or lenticular aspect) described below and the upper eyelid tarsal plate to stabilize the contact lens and may also use the interaction between the base of the prism and the lower eyelid. Interactions between the lens and one or both eyelids provides better stabilization in the lens design disclosed herein. This same contact lens design also allows for the contact lens to have a translational movement when the patient looks from straight ahead gaze into downgaze. Instead of pushing the base of the prism in the contact lens upwards with the lower eyelid, as much of the prior art attempts to do, this design pulls the contact lens upwards with the superior lenticular aspect. This is because the lenticular aspect allows the contact lens to use a “lid-attached” fit, wherein the lens stays with the upper lid as the patient looks downwards. Such lid-attached contact lenses are further described in U.S. Pat. No. 10,191,302 issued Jan. 29, 2019, U.S. Pat. No. 10,598,957 issued Mar. 24, 2020, U.S. Pat. No. 11,022,816 issued Jun. 1, 2021, and U.S. Pat. No. 11,022,817 issued Jun. 1, 2021, each of which are fully incorporated by reference and made a part hereof.
The present disclosure also relates to contact lenses that include a lenticular and one or more transition zones between optical zones. The optical zones can allow for clear vision at multiple distances. Further, the present disclosure also includes contact lenses that include a steeper-than-normal base curve radius on the back surface, and/or larger edge lift regions on the back surface. Combined with the lenticular described herein, these surfaces enable the lens to center when the user gazes straight ahead, but also move when the user looks into downgaze.
Furthermore, the present disclosure relates to contact lens where minimization of the prismatic effect is accomplished with a customized alignment by power allows for faint image from opposite zone to be overlayed on in-focus image.
The description below sets forth details of one or more embodiments of the present disclosure. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and from the claims.
The accompanying figures, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate several aspects described below.
The present disclosure now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to specific exemplary embodiments. Indeed, the present disclosure can be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein.
Disclosed herein is a contact lens having an optical zone. In some embodiments, the contact lens further comprises a lenticular over an upper (superior) portion of the lens. For example, the lenticular may comprise a rounded, minus-carrier, lenticular-like curve over a central, upper portion of the lens, though other lenticular shapes, designs and locations are contemplated. As used herein, “lenticular” or “lenticular aspect” refers to one or more elevated sections in a superior portion of the contact lens located so that at least one of the elevated sections interacts with the upper tarsal plate in a manner that it attaches the contact lens to the inside of the upper eyelid. “Elevated,” as used herein, means that the lenticular extends 0.01mm to 1.0 mm or more above the normal surface of the outwardly-facing side of the contact lens away from the eye. In some instances, the optical zone comprises an addition power zone. “Addition power,” as used herein, refers to the contact lens having an optical zone that is bifocal, trifocal, progressive addition, etc.
Some embodiments of a contact lens disclosed herein comprises a superiorly-located lenticular design that creates: (1) rotational stability of the contact lens in all gazes, (2) upwards translation, or movement, of the contact lens when the eye is in downward gaze, and (3) a general, centered placement of the contact lens over the cornea and the pupil as needed as the person's gaze changes. By “upwards translation of the contact lens when the eye is in downward gaze” means that the contact lens is held in an upwards position when the patient looks down. Some of the embodiments disclosed and described herein include one or more lenticulars located in a superior portion of the contact lens where the lenticular has any shape that would allow any contact lens (soft, rigid gas permeable, hybrid, etc.) to attach itself to the inside of the upper eyelid.
Referring to
In
The current state-of-the-art in translating contact lenses is a rigid gas permeable contact lens. There are currently no successful soft contact lenses that achieve translating vision. All of the prior art in translating soft contact lenses moves in the opposite direction of this design, i.e., all other designs attempt to thin the upper portion of the contact lens as much as possible, rather than making it thicker and attached to the upper eyelid. The contact lens disclosed herein provides a translating contact lens, including a soft contact lens, which is more comfortable and requires less adaptation time than a rigid gas permeable lens. Generally speaking, patients are more willing and able to wear a soft contact lens than a rigid gas permeable contact lens, and a soft contact lens requires less expertise to fit. The current state-of-the-art in bifocal, progressive addition, etc. soft contact lenses is simultaneous vision. In these lenses, both the rays focusing the distance vision and the rays focusing the near vision are within the pupil at the same time. Thus, the patient must be able to ignore the rays that are not in focus. This leads to some degradation of vision. The translating soft contact lens disclosed herein allow only light from one distance to be in focus at a time, providing clearer vision at each distance.
The other current state-of-the-art option for fitting presbyopic patients in soft contact lenses is called monovision. In this case, one eye is powered for distance vision (usually the dominant eye) and one eye is powered for near vision (usually the non-dominant eye). Some patients are unable to adapt to this type of lens, again, especially when the patient requires a greater reading add power. The difference between the two eyes becomes too uncomfortable. Also, it is well established that monovision correction in contact lenses or laser vision correction leads to a loss of depth perception. The translating soft contact lens disclosed herein allows for the use of higher reading add powers without degradation of the quality of distance vision. Because both eyes are fully and equally corrected at distance and near in the disclosed design, there is no induced loss of depth perception. The translating soft contact lens disclosed herein can also have an optical segment that provides a gradient of power change between the distance and near segments.
The contact lenses disclosed herein are designed to suit many practical purposes. For example, in both rigid and soft contact lenses, the lens designs disclosed herein provide rotational stabilization in all gazes for toric contact lens designs, contact lenses designed to correct for various types of ocular aberration beyond a spherical correction, for electronically-generated and/or virtual optically displayed images, and/or bifocal, progressive addition, etc. contact lenses. Additionally, the lens designs disclosed herein create upwards translation of a bifocal/progressive addition, etc. contact lens in downward gaze. Furthermore, the lens designs disclosed herein achieve a “lid attached” fit similar to rigid gas permeable contact lens, i.e., keep the contact lens attached under the upper eyelid before, during, and after a blink.
In one embodiment, the upper portion of the contact lens interacts with an upper eyelid of the wearer. The upper portion of the contact lens that interacts with the upper eyelid can comprise 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, 65, 70, or 75% of the area between the upper edge of the contact lens and the geometric center of the contact lens. For example, the area of the upper portion of the contact lens (meaning the “top half” of the contact lens, or the area between the upper edge and geometric center of the contact lens) that interacts with the upper eyelid can comprise 10 to 50% of the upper area of the lens.
Conventionally, a minus carrier lenticular can be used in rigid gas permeable contact lenses in order to create a lid attached fit in a plus-shaped contact lens. In the contact lens design disclosed herein, a lenticular 101 is placed in the central, upper portion of the lens only, rather than over a larger portion of the lens circumference. Some embodiments of the lens designs disclosed herein have a smaller area where a relatively thick edge is present to interact with the upper eyelid margin, and the minimal presence of the lenticular improves comfort over a more traditional minus carrier lenticular that would ordinarily be placed over the entire lens circumference. There is enough surface area and thickness of the lenticular present in the contact lens disclosed herein; however, to interact with the upper tarsal plate to assist with centration and rotational stability. Furthermore, the lenticular 101 is positioned in the superior portion of the contact lens such that interacts with the upper tarsal plate in a manner that it attaches to the upper eyelid. The lenticular 101 does not just interact with the margin of the upper eyelid.
As shown in
As disclosed above, the contact lens comprises a relatively thick area compared to the remaining portion of the contact lens. This area of thickness can be 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10 times thicker than the remaining “non-thick” portion of the contact lens. For example, the relatively thick area can comprise a thickest portion, which is 2 to 10 times thicker than the remaining center portion of the contact lens.
The embodiments of contact lens disclosed herein can be used in the correction of ametropia (myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism, and/or higher order aberrations) in patients with or without presbyopia, i.e., a reading add that moves upwards through translation, in patients with other accommodative disorders, and/or patients with a binocular vision disorder can also be provided in the lens designs disclosed herein. Presbyopia affects approximately 100% of the population who live long enough (approximately >45 years of age) to develop the condition. The embodiments of contact lens disclosed herein can also treat other accommodative disorders, or binocular vision disorder. In some instances, embodiments of the contact lens disclosed herein can be used to display an electronically-generated and/or other virtual optically-displayed image.
Conventional contact lenses provide very limited options in terms of design parameters such as diameter and curvature. The disclosed contact lenses achieve translation in a soft contact lens. Soft contact lenses are typically only feasible to manufacture in two base curve options, and very few are offered in multiple diameters. These multiple options in these two parameters in addition to the ability to vary the prism height, size, amount, or axis are optionally considered in the lens designs disclosed herein. Back or front surface toricity takes advantage of a toric, rather than spherical, corneal shape that occurs in some patients with astigmatism. The lenses disclosed herein still work when the cornea is spherical (not toric). The described lenses also have an advantage over base-down prism, peri-ballasting, and Dynamic Stabilization in that it optionally uses a lenticular aspect described above to use the upper eyelid tarsal plate to stabilize the contact lens in addition to the prismatic interaction of the lower eyelid (in lenses having an inferior prism or ballast). Interactions with both eyelids can provide better stabilization. In implementations described herein, the interaction between the lenticular and the upper tarsal plate of the upper eyelid of a wearer can cause the contact lens to translate upwards in downgaze.
Furthermore, disclosed herein are additional configurations of optical zones that can be formed on contact lenses. With reference to
As a non-limiting example, the optical zones described can be used as alternatives to the optical zones shown in
A challenge with contact lens having optical zones with addition powers is that distance to near transition is incredibly small—5 mm maximum total usable zone size. Thus, distance and near images may appear faintly in the opposite zone (i.e., “ghosting”) due to a small portion of the light bundle transmitting through each zone. Furthermore, prismatic effects of the higher plus- and minus-shaped lenses may cause perceptible image jump and displacement between image and ghost and between images from different zones. Minimization of this prismatic effect is accomplished with a customized alignment by power that allows for faint image from opposite zone to be overlayed on in-focus image.
As shown in
Referring again to
Additionally, still referring to the non-limiting example lens 300 in
Throughout the present disclosure, the “height” of the transition zones 314318 is measured vertically along the contact lens 300. The height of the transition zones 314318 and visual powers 312316320 illustrated in
Additionally, still referring to
Disclosed herein are also methods of making the contact lenses disclosed herein. For example, disclosed is a method of making a contact lens, the method comprising manufacturing a contact lens comprising forming a rounded, minus-carrier, lenticular-like curve over a central, upper portion of the lens. The contact lens can further comprise a base down prism in the inferior portion of the lens where the minus-carrier, lenticular-like curve. In one example, the base down prism is added to the lens in a second step of a manufacturing process. In some implementations, the contact lens is fabricated using a lathe (i.e. by the process of “lathing”) or a mold. Optionally, the mold for forming the contact lens can be fabricated using a lathe. In some implementations, the contact lens is fabricated partially or completely by using a die. In some implementations, the design parameters of the contact lens can be determined by, or based on, the characteristics of the lathe. These lathe characteristics can include the rate at which the lathe can accelerate or decelerate, or the size of the lathe. When the lathe is used to fabricate a mold, the characteristics can impact the characteristics of a mold for forming the contact lens, which can therefore impact the characteristics of the contact lens formed using a mold.
For example, as shown in
Also disclosed is a method of treating an individual in need of vision correction, the method comprising dispensing the contact lens disclosed herein to the individual, thereby treating the individual in need of vision correction. In one example, the individual has been diagnosed with ametropia. In another example, the individual has been diagnosed with presbyopia, another accommodative disorder, and/or a binocular vision disorder.
As used in the specification, and in the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” “the,” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
The compositions and methods of the appended claims are not limited in scope by the specific compositions and methods described herein, which are intended as illustrations of a few aspects of the claims and any compositions and methods that are functionally equivalent are intended to fall within the scope of the claims. Various modifications of the compositions and methods in addition to those shown and described herein are intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims. Further, while only certain representative compositions and method steps disclosed herein are specifically described, other combinations of the compositions and method steps also are intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims, even if not specifically recited. Thus, a combination of steps, elements, components, or constituents may be explicitly mentioned herein or less, however, other combinations of steps, elements, components, and constituents are included, even though not explicitly stated. The term “comprising” and variations thereof as used herein is used synonymously with the term “including” and variations thereof and are open, non-limiting terms. Although the terms “comprising” and “including” have been used herein to describe various embodiments, the terms “consisting essentially of” and “consisting of” can be used in place of “comprising” and “including” to provide for more specific embodiments of the invention and are also disclosed. Other than in the examples, or where otherwise noted, all numbers expressing quantities of ingredients, reaction conditions, and so forth used in the specification and claims are to be understood at the very least, and not as an attempt to limit the application of the doctrine of equivalents to the scope of the claims, to be construed in light of the number of significant digits and ordinary rounding approaches.
This application claims priority to and benefit of U.S. Provisional patent application Ser. No. 63/304,328 filed Jan. 28, 2022, which is fully incorporated by reference and made a part hereof.
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US2023/061450 | 1/27/2023 | WO |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 63304328 | Jan 2022 | US |