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Are Soft Silicone Hydrogel Contact Lenses More Compliant in a Warm, Hydrated Environment?

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Soft contact lenses are usually characterised at room temperature, yet they function on the eye at body temperature, where their mechanics and optical performance can change. This study investigated whether soft silicone hydrogel lenses become more compliant in a physiological environment. Two silicone hydrogel materials (Definitive 74 and Unisil) were tested at 24 °C and 35 °C using uniaxial tensile and compression methods, with Ogden hyperelastic models fitted and finite element analysis performed on a realistic eye model. Both materials became more compliant at 35 °C, with Definitive 74 showing a larger modulus decrease (0.40 to 0.32 MPa) than Unisil (0.73 to 0.70 MPa). Finite element simulations indicated that these temperature-driven changes in compliance significantly affected refractive power, especially when the lens base curve exceeded the corneal radius by more than 5%. These findings demonstrate that soft silicone hydrogel lenses are indeed more compliant in a warm, hydrated environment, highlighting the need for physiologically relevant testing to inform design, fitting strategies, comfort, and vision outcomes.

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Peer reviewed: True


Acknowledgements: The authors thank Ya-Yi Chen from Brighten Optix Corporation for providing constructive feedback based on her broad clinical experience.


Publication status: Published

Journal Title

Processes

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Journal ISSN

2227-9717
2227-9717

Volume Title

13

Publisher

MDPI

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/