Glasses Care and Contact Lens Safety

 

Glasses or contact lenses might be small, but they make a massive difference in our daily lives.

Anyone who wears glasses or contacts (unless they’ve had them since they were toddlers) can remember what it was like to suddenly be able to see individual leaves and blades of grass when they started wearing them, and being able to see clearly is critical for so many things we do every day. That’s why taking good care of our lenses is so important!

Proper Glasses Care

Glasses tend to gather dust, oil, and other small debris throughout the day, and so they require a lot of cleaning. It might be tempting to reach for the corner of your shirt, but it’s better to use a cotton or microfiber cloth with glasses cleaner. A drop of dish soap in a small spray bottle of water makes a pretty good homemade glasses cleaner if you don’t already have some.
 

If you don’t have a glasses cloth handy, the edge of a cotton shirt can work in a pinch, but definitely avoid any wood-based materials like tissues or napkins. Anything made of wood pulp can easily leave scratches in a glasses lens. You also want to avoid using chemical cleaners like window cleaner or ammonia, as they will dissolve the protective coatings on your lens.
 

Aside from using the right materials to clean it, you should really store your glasses in their case when you aren’t wearing them. Try not to fall asleep with them on because you could damage them in your sleep!

Care and Safety of Your Contact Lenses

Taking care of contact lenses is a slightly more involved process. Contact lenses are medical devices that sit directly on the eye, so cleaning them is more about hygiene than maintenance. Here are the major points:

  • Make sure to only ever handle your contact lenses with freshly cleaned hands.
  • Never reuse contact lens solution for cleaning or storage. All it takes is one use to contaminate the solution!
  • Never use water on contact lenses (definitely never use spit!). All sources of freshwater contain microorganisms that you don’t want in your eyes.
  • Follow the packaging instructions for how frequently to replace your contacts and how long to wear them before taking them out.

Don’t cut corners on your contact lens care! Even if it saves you a little money in new bottles of contact lens solution, it could cost you an eye infection somewhere down the line. The trade-off isn’t worth it.

Extra Tips for Preventing Eye Infections

Anyone who wears contacts should be especially diligent about minimizing their eye infection risk. That includes things like avoiding rubbing your eyes (because it could introduce germs, damage the lens, or scratch your cornea), remembering to blink often, staying hydrated, and using eye drops if your eyes ever feel too dry. That all goes hand-in-hand with our previous advice!

Come to Us With Any Lens Problems or Questions

Whether you have glasses or contacts, feel free to bring us your questions about how to properly care for them. We want to make sure our patients are getting the most out of their corrective lenses! Also make sure to get in touch if you experience irritation, redness, or other symptoms of an eye infection, and even if everything seems to be going great, your regular eye exams still matter. Not every eye problem or prescription update is obvious to the patient.
 

Your lifelong healthy vision is our highest priority!


Top image used under CC0 Public Domain license. Image cropped and modified from original.


The content on this blog is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of qualified health providers with questions you may have regarding medical conditions.

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