LENS EDGE FEATURES FOR DETERMING LENS PLACEMENT AND ALIGNMENT
20170255024 · 2017-09-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02C7/021
PHYSICS
G02C7/048
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A contact lens having a lens edge defining an outer periphery of the contact lens, an optic zone positioned within the lens edge designed to provide corrective vision for a patient, a Lens Center having a vertical axis and a horizontal axis passing therethrough, and first and second fiducial indicators present at first and second different locations around the lens edge. The first and second fiducial indicators each include at least one recess into or at least one projection extending outwardly from the lens edge and are different from one another.
Claims
1. A contact lens comprising: a lens edge defining an outer periphery of said contact lens; an optic zone positioned within said lens edge, said optic zone designed to provide corrective vision for a patient; and a Lens Center having a vertical axis and a horizontal axis passing therethrough; and first and second fiducial indicators present at first and second different locations around said lens edge, said first and second fiducial indicators each comprising at least one recess into or at least one projection extending outwardly from said lens edge and being different from one another.
2. The contact lens according to claim 1, wherein said first fiducial indicator comprises at least one recess and said second fiducial indicator comprises at least one projection.
3. The contact lens according to claim 1, wherein said first fiducial indicator comprises a first recess in said lens edge, said recess extending between first and second points along said lens edge; and wherein said second fiducial indicator comprises second and third recesses in said lens edge, said second and third recesses being positioned substantially adjacent one another and between third and fourth points around said lens edge.
4. The contact lens according to claim 3, wherein the first and second points are located on a first lateral side of said vertical axis within an angle β of 3-25 degrees measured relative to the Lens Center.
5. The contact lens according to claim 4, wherein the third and fourth points are located on an opposite side of the vertical axis from the second and third points and within an angle γ of 6-50 degrees measured relative to the Lens Center.
6. The contact lens according to claim 5, wherein the first point is positioned an angle α of approximately 15 degrees below the horizontal axis as measured relative to the Lens Center.
7. The contact lens according to claim 6, wherein the third point is positioned at an angle τ of approximately 15 degrees below the horizontal axis as measured relative to the Lens Center.
8. The contact lens according to claim 3, wherein the first, second and third recesses have a depth of between 0.10 and 0.60 mm.
9. The contact lens according to claim 8, wherein the first, second and third recesses have a depth of approximately 0.30 mm.
10. The contact lens according to claim 1, further comprising first and second skirt zones positioned outside of the optic zone and on first and second sides of the vertical axis respectively.
11. The contact lens according to claim 10, wherein the first fiducial indicator comprises a first recess in said lens edge, said recess extending between first and second points along said lens edge; and wherein the second fiducial indicator comprises second and third recesses in said lens edge, said second and third recesses being positioned substantially adjacent one another and between third and fourth points around said lens edge, and wherein said first recess is located in said first skirt zone and said second and third recesses are located in said second skirt zone.
12. A contact lens comprising: a lens edge defining an outer periphery of said contact lens; an optic zone positioned within said lens edge, said optic zone designed to provide corrective vision for a patient; a Lens Center having a vertical axis and a horizontal axis passing therethrough; and a first recess in said lens edge at a first location and extending between first and second points along said lens edge; and a dual notch comprising adjacent second and third recesses in said lens edge at a second location around said lens edge that is different than said first location, said dual notches extending between third and fourth points along said lens edge.
13. The contact lens according to claim 12, further comprising first and second skirt zones positioned outside of the optic zone on first and second sides of the vertical axis respectively.
14. The contact lens according to claim 13, wherein the first recess and dual notch are located in the first and second skirt zones respectively.
15. The contact lens according to claim 14, wherein the first recess and dual notch are located below the horizontal axis.
16. A contact lens comprising: a lens edge defining an outer periphery of said contact lens; an optic zone positioned within said lens edge, said optic zone designed to provide corrective vision for a patient; and at least a first fiducial indicator present at a predetermined location around said lens edge, said first fiducial indicator comprising a recess into or projection extending outwardly from said lens edge.
17. The contact lens according to claim 16, wherein said first fiducial indicator is a recess having a depth of at least 0.10 mm.
18. The contact lens according to claim 17, wherein the depth is at least 0.30 mm.
19. The contact lens according to claim 18, wherein said first fiducial indicator is a projection having a height of at least 0.10 mm.
20. The contact lens according to claim 19, wherein the height is at least 0.3 mm.
21. The contact lens according to claim 20, further comprising at least first and second fiducials indicators positioned at first and second predetermined locations around said lens edge, wherein said first and second fiducial indicators are both recesses into said lens edge.
22. The contact lens according to claim 20, further comprising at least a first and second fiducial indicators positioned at first and second predetermined locations around said lens edge, wherein said first and second fiducial indicators are both projections extending outwardly from said lens edge.
23. A contact lens comprising: a lens edge defining an outer periphery of said contact lens; and an optic zone positioned within said lens edge, said optic zone designed to provide corrective vision for a patient; wherein said lens edge is curved around its entire periphery other than along a predetermined first portion wherein said lens edge is straight.
24. The contact lens according to claim 23, wherein said first portion has a length between 1 and 8 mm.
25. The contact lens according to claim 24, wherein said length is approximately 5 mm.
26. The contact lens according to claim 25, wherein said predetermined location is such that the first portion is substantially parallel to a virtual vertical midline of said contact lens.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Glossary
[0026] In the description and claims directed to the present invention, various terms may be used for which the following definitions will apply:
[0027] “Decentration Error” as used herein, refers to an orientation offset, often descried in terms of (x, y) coordinates, relative to a determined point upon a patient's eye, such as the pupil or iris center, or a limbal edge. For example, a Lens with Decentration Error may orient itself where only a fraction of the Optic Zone sits over pupil region and skewing the corrective power of the Lens.
[0028] “Fitting Lens” as used herein refers to a standard, preferably stabilized contact lens that is designed to aid a practitioner in determining lens position on the eye, or for selecting or designing a contact lens. The fitting lens may have stability and measuring points incorporated in the lens to assist with measuring the rotational position of the lens and the decentration of the lens in relation to the patient's eye.
[0029] “Eye Physiology” or “Human Eye Physiology” as referred to herein includes the patient's unique shape of the front portion of the eye (the “anterior chamber”) for whom an ophthalmic lens may be generated/customized for best fit. This includes, but is not limited to properties of a patient's eyeball, eye lids, or tear function.
[0030] “Lens” as used herein refers to any ophthalmic device that resides in or on the eye. These devices can provide optical correction or may be cosmetic. For example, the term lens can refer to a contact lens, intraocular lens, overlay lens, ocular insert, optical insert or other similar device through which vision is corrected or modified, or through which eye physiology is cosmetically enhanced (e.g. iris color) without impeding vision. In some embodiments, the preferred lenses of the invention are soft contact lenses are made from silicone elastomers or hydrogels, which include but are not limited to silicone hydrogels, and fluorohydrogels.
[0031] “Lens Center” as used herein, is the geometrical center of a round lens, or for a non-round lens can be determined as illustrated in
[0032] “Lens Design” as used herein, refers to form, function or both of a desired Lens, which if fabricated, may provide optical power correction, acceptable Lens fit (e.g., corneal coverage and movement), acceptable Lens rotation stability, etc. Lens Designs may be represented in either a hydrated or un-hydrated state, in Flat or Curved Space, in 2-dimensional or 3-dimensional space, and by a method including but not limited to, geometric drawings, power profile, shape, features, thicknesses etc. Lens Designs may contain data associated with a regularly or irregularly spaced grid.
[0033] “Lens Position Error” as used herein refers to a Lens which orients itself so that a patient suffers diminished fit, comfort, visual acuity, or any other desired aspect of a Lens. This includes, for example, a Lens oriented with Decentration Error or Rotation Error, or both. This may also include a Lens which loses stability as a result of eye movement or a patient's blinking dynamics. Any movement, either static or dynamic, that reduces the effectiveness of any aspect of the Lens may be considered a Lens Position Error.
[0034] “Optimal Lens Position” as used herein, refers to a lens positioned with no Rotation Error or Decentration Error relative to the needed corrective orientation of a Lens on an eye. Additionally, this term may refer to aspects of stability and variation, which may or may not, be the result of eye or eyelid movement.
[0035] “Rotation Error” as used herein, refers to a misalignment relative to an angular orientation that meets the needs of a patient's eye. For example, a Lens may orient itself upon a patient's eye at a 30 degree clockwise error, therefor skewing one or multiple of the corrective power axes.
[0036] Typically, a patient is given an eye exam as part of the process that an eye care practitioner uses to select a suitable contact lens for that patient. As indicated previously, however, a selected lens may not always behave as anticipated when actually placed on the eye due to the interaction between the lens and the patient's unique Eye Physiology, which may affect lens comfort, fit and/or vision when the lens is on the eye. The present invention provides a lens with edge features that enable a practitioner to measure and evaluate Lens Position Error. The presently disclosed edge features further provide a visual indicator to a patient when held in hand prior to insertion that assists in proper placement of the lens on the eye.
[0037] As previously noted, measuring and evaluating the position and rotation of a lens on a patient's eye can be done in any well-known manner, such as by using direct viewing methods with a slit lamp, photographic or video recording of the slit lamp image, or via images generated using corneal topographers, wavefront sensors, or any other suitable means. Recorded electronic images can readily be loaded into software that automatically detects the position of the lens on the eye and calculates Lens Position Error rather than relying on visual measurements. To do so either way, however, the practitioner must have a readily identifiable reference marker on the lens so that any movement of the lens relative to its ideal orientation on the eye can be determined. As indicated previously, fiducial marks placed on the front or back curve of the lens are known, but are disadvantageous in that they require additional manufacturing steps to place such marks on the lens.
[0038] Referring now to a preferred embodiment illustrated in
[0039] Positioning the single and dual notches outside of the optic zone ensures that they will not in any way affect the patient's vision, which enables the edge features to be included in the final contact lens product if desired.
[0040] As further illustrated in the preferred embodiment of
[0041] Preferably, the first 212 and second 214 points span an angle β of between 3 and 25 degrees, and more preferably approximately 10 degrees. Preferably, the third 216 and fourth 218 points span an angle γ of approximately 6 to 50 degrees, and more preferably 20 degrees. With regard to the dual notch, it consists of adjacent first 220 and second 222 recesses. Each of the first and second recesses are preferably approximately the same size, and each preferably spans an angle, δ and ε respectively, of between 3 and 25 degrees, and more preferably 10 degrees.
[0042]
[0043] The preferred dimensions recited above are visible by the practitioner when examining and can easily be detected by computerized imaging systems that can detect the edge features as they are departures from the bulk curvature of the vast majority of the lens edge. Enhancement of the notches may be achieved via the use of UV cameras and detectors, of example. Once detected, the edge features can be analyzed relative to a template, or pattern, of the lens design and positioning intent, thereby allowing rotational offset and positioning errors to be calculated. They have the further advantage of being visible to the bare eye when not on the eye, such as when held by a patient prior to placement, to assist a patient in confirming correct orientation before placing the lens on the eye. Having different visual indicators (i.e., single and dual recesses) on different sides of the lens enables the patient to verify correct orientation of the lens before actually placing the lens on the eye. For example, knowing the configuration of the different lens edge features enables the patient to tell whether the lens is right side up or upside down. Further, the non-matching edge features also enable the patient to readily identify whether the contact lens is properly right side out or has flipped inside out. For example, in the illustrated embodiment, the contact lens is designed so that the dual notch is always on the right relative to the single notch when properly worn. Knowing this, the patient has a visual indication of whether the lens is right side up. Further, should the dual notches be present on the left when right side up, the patient will readily know that the lens is inside out and needs to be inverted before being placed on the eye.
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[0045]
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[0047] Once the Lens Position Error is determined, it can be corrected with any one of various lens redesigns. Most significantly, the patient's vision correction can be improved by repositioning the optic zone relative to the remainder of the lens. This approach allows the lens to retain the same actual on-eye position with the optic zone moved to a location on the lens that will provide the patient with the designed vision correction.
[0048] Various other lens design changes may also selectively be leveraged to address Lens Position Error once it is known. For example, once positioning data has been obtained for a particular lens, an analysis of that data may allow for a design of a lens that incorporates an alternate base curve. The alternate base curve will interact differently with the patient's eye and eye lid, resulting in a different lens position than the first lens. Alternatively, a different diameter may also be subsequently chosen, which similarly may change the interaction with the patient's eye and eye lid therefore changing the resulting lens positioning.
[0049] In yet another example, skirt zones may be modified. Skirt zones are sometimes referred to as stabilization zones when they are designed to affect the stability and/or positioning of a lens on an eye. Typically, the standard or stock lenses from which each subsequent lens may be chosen have a finite number of stabilization zone options, if any at all. In a manufacturing process as set forth in U.S. Pat. No. 8,636,357, it may be possible to produce the stabilization zones to provide a custom fit for the patient. Once the positioning data is obtained and analyzed, a lens design may be produced that modifies one or all of the stabilization zones to result in optimal lens movement on the eye.
[0050] Although illustrative embodiments of the present invention have been described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to those precise embodiments and that various other changes and modifications may be effected herein by one skilled in the art without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention.