CLEAR CARE Gets An Upgrade
Out this fall is the latest version of CLEAR CARE, the hydrogen peroxide solution that really set the standard for safety and performance for the last few decades of lens wearers. The solution still requires 6 hours (overnight) to neutralize, and there is no change to it's anti-microbial properties. But the solution now includes an extra hydration polymer called "Hyrdaglyde" that helps prevent drying out of the contact lens as it goes through it's life span (be that 2 week or monthly). This polymer is also in the new OPTI-FREE PureMoist solution.
Click over to get your $5 Coupon off a bottle of CLEAR CARE Plus |
Sometimes my patients will ask me if using CLEAR CARE is too harsh for their eyes. On the contrary, hydrogen peroxide solutions are the only preservative free lens cleaners on the market so compared to multi-purpose solutions these are way less harsh and great for sensitive patients or those with hypoallergenic needs. One thing traditional hydrogen peroxide solutions could do though was potentially dry the lens. Yes this solution removes debris, but that extra cleaning may wear on the moisture layers on the front and back surface of your contact lens too. That's the concept behind the new addition of moisture "boosters" like Hydraglyde in CLEAR CARE. Now the solution is deep cleaning, and adding back moisture to the lens at the same time.
New Smart Contact Lens Case Tells You When Your Lenses Are Clean
One of the potential knocks against hydrogen peroxide contact lens solutions is how do you know when your lenses are ready to wear again? If you don't neutralize the peroxide long enough (for CLEAR CARE, that's 6 hours and for PeroxiClear it's 4 hours), then your lenses will sting your eyes really terribly when you try to put them back in. The FDA has recently approved NovaBay's Intelli-Case, a contact lens case to be used with peroxide solutions that tells you where you are in the cleaning process. When your lenses are ready, the light turns green on the top of the case, telling you it's safe to insert them in your eyes.
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