Advice2022-01-17T17:03:02+00:00

Advice

Why you should always use anaesthetic during contact lens A&R

By Scott Brown, Optometrist | Scotlens Clinical Director & Lens Designer

In this article I focus on what we can do when teaching application and removal (A&R) in order to get kids started with contact lenses successfully. I especially want to highlight the fact that dropout rates go from 1 in 20 when anaesthetic is used for A&R, compared to 1 in 5 without!1. Although focused on kids, this information is applicable for all ages.
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“FIRST AFTER CARE: To remove lenses, or not to remove lenses … that is the question!”

By Scott Brown, Optometrist | Scotlens Clinical Director & Lens Designer

I am often asked this question and have noticed more and more Optometrists asking patients to come to their first appointment with their lenses in. My advice is to attend the first appointment with their lenses out.  Patients are best to remove their lenses when they wake for all after cares. When the eye is open, lenses always sit in a different position to behind the closed lid. If they are awake for an hour or two before you see them…

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Ortho-K assessment: bubbles, slit lamps and patient technique

By Scott Brown, Optometrist | Scotlens Clinical Director & Lens Designer

How much should we depend on slit lamp assessment of ortho-k lenses? The accuracy of Scotlens topography fitting means we don’t depend on the open eye fluorescein (NaF) assessment for lens design. A lens on eye assessment is worthwhile during the application and removal appointment to see if lenses are being applied without trapping a bubble. The information we can get is very limited, so I don’t subject patients to a long slit lamp assessment…

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Using ‘Ortho-k’ or ‘Night lenses’ terms with patients

By Scott Brown, Optometrist | Scotlens Clinical Director & Lens Designer

Scott is also the Clinical Director & Lens Designer for Scotlens | Custom fit contact lenses, who make the Nocturnal Ortho-K night lens]

I have been asked this question a lot recently, so I thought I’d put my answer down in a blog post to share with others – whether to continue using the medical terms ‘Orthokeratology’ and ‘Ortho-K lenses’ (which, to be honest, has been one of the major factors that has lead to these incredible lenses not growing as they should have done by now) … or whether to use the colloquial term ‘Night lenses’

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Why I choose Avizor Solutions for new contact lens wearers

By Scott Brown, Optometrist | Scotlens Clinical Director & Lens Designer

I am often asked why we supply Avizor GP Multi and Lacrifresh Ocudry 0.3% in our Nocturnal (Ortho-K night lens) starter box, shown above.

Was it because Avizor turned up with a big suitcase of cash and asked us to? That would have been lovely, but far from it. The reality is that both solutions have proven themselves as great products to me as an Optometrist, enhancing patient compliance and satisfaction.

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