Silicone hydrogel contact lenses: A complete guide
Silicone hydrogel contact lenses are advanced soft lenses that allow more oxygen to pass through the lens to the cornea than regular soft ("hydrogel") contacts. In fact, silicone hydrogel lenses enable up to five times more oxygen to reach the cornea than regular hydrogel lenses.
Silicone hydrogel and regular hydrogel lenses both are made of plastics that are hard when dry but readily absorb water and become soft and gel-like when hydrated.
If you've ever let a soft or silicone hydrogel lens dry out, you know that it becomes deformed, hard and fragile. But if you soak it for a few minutes in contact lens solution, it becomes soft and pliable again.
In 2014, silicone hydrogel lenses accounted for 68 percent of contact lens fittings performed in the United States, compared with 24 percent for regular soft lenses, 6 percent for rigid gas permeable contacts and 1 percent for hybrid contact lenses.
Popular brands of silicone hydrogel contact lenses include Acuvue Oasys (Vistakon), Air Optix Aqua (Alcon), Biofinity (CooperVision) and PureVision2 (Bausch + Lomb).
Silicone Hydrogel (Not Silicon Hydrogel) Contacts
Silicone hydrogel contact lenses sometimes are erroneously called silicon hydrogel lenses.
Silicon is a very common mineral. In fact, ordinary sand is composed primarily of silicon dioxide (silica).
And highly purified silicon is used to manufacture semiconductors, which is why the southern part of the San Francisco Bay area, home of Apple and many other high-tech and computer companies, is nicknamed Silicon Valley.
Silicone is the name of a group of flexible, plastic-like materials that contain silicon, carbon, oxygen and other chemicals. In addition to its use to increase the oxygen permeability of contact lenses, silicone is used to make breast implants, medical tubing and other medical devices.
Silicone hydrogel lenses are soft lenses, but silicone also is used in the production of many rigid gas permeable contacts to improve oxygen permeability of the lenses.
Benefits Of Silicone Hydrogel Lenses
All contact lenses reduce the amount of oxygen that reaches the front surface of the eye to some degree. When the cornea's oxygen supply is significantly reduced — a condition called hypoxia — a number of problems such as red eyes, corneal swelling, blurred vision and eye discomfort can occur. Hypoxia also can increase contact lens wearers' risk for a number of eye infections.
Hypoxia-related eye problems became a significant issue in the 1990s when extended wear contact lenses first gained popularity. As the number of people who wore contacts overnight and continuously for several days increased, so did the number of contact lens-related eye infections.
Silicone hydrogel lenses were introduced in hopes of decreasing hypoxia-related problems and increasing the safety of both daily wear and extended wear of soft contact lenses.
Increasing the oxygen supply to the eye is potentially beneficial for all contact lens wearers, especially considering that many wearers are not complying with their eye doctors' instructions regarding proper lens wear and replacement.
According to Alcon, nearly one in five soft contact lens wearers wear their lenses during sleep, and among patients who sleep in their lenses, nearly two out of three are wearing lenses that are not approved for overnight wear.
Specialty Silicone Hydrogel Lenses
The enhanced oxygen permeability of silicone hydrogel contacts makes them a great fit for special contact lens designs that might cause hypoxia problems when made with conventional soft hydrogel materials.
These include any designs that require greater lens mass, such as toric contacts for astigmatism, bifocal contact lenses, contacts for hard-to-fit eyes, and custom contact lenses, including soft contact lenses for keratoconus.
Risk Of Keratitis With Silicone Hydrogel Contacts
Do silicone hydrogel contact lenses reduce the risk of keratitis and eye infections? Yes and no.
A recent study published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology found a significantly lower risk of severe keratitis among silicone hydrogel users, but a higher risk of non-severe keratitis.
The 12-month, hospital-based study conducted in the U.K. showed the annual incidences of non-severe keratitis (NSK) were low in both groups, affecting 14.1 per 10,000 wearers (0.14 percent) among hydrogel wearers and 55.9 per 10,000 wearers (0.56 percent) among silicone hydrogel wearers.
There were no cases of severe keratitis (SK) among patients using silicone hydrogel contact lenses for daily wear, whereas there were 6.4 cases of SK per 10,000 patients using regular hydrogel lenses for daily wear.
The risk of keratitis was significantly greater for both types of soft contacts among patients who used their lenses for overnight wear. Hydrogel lenses worn continuously caused 48.2 cases of NSK and 96.4 cases of SK per 10,000 wearers; silicone hydrogel lenses used for extended wear caused 98.8 cases of NSK and 19.8 cases of SK per 10,000 wearers.
The researchers concluded there is a significantly higher incidence of severe keratitis in wearers who sleep in contact lenses compared with those who only use contact lenses during the waking hours. They recommended that people who want to wear contact lenses continuously should be advised to wear silicone hydrogel lenses, which appear to be much safer for overnight wear than regular hydrogel lenses.
Critics of silicone hydrogel contact lenses have used this study as evidence that silicone hydrogels are associated with a greater risk of non-severe keratitis compared with regular hydrogel lenses. It is worth noting, however, that the study did not evaluate how many of the silicone hydrogel lens wearers who exhibited NSK were refitted into silicone hydrogel lenses from conventional hydrogel lenses prior to the study period due to similar problems while wearing hydrogel lenses.
Also, at the time of the study, the only silicone hydrogel lenses approved for use in the U.K. were designed for monthly lens replacement, whereas there were several brands of regular hydrogel lenses available for more frequent two-week replacement.
Today, several brands of silicone hydrogel lenses are approved for use in the United States and Europe that are designed for two-week and monthly replacement. There are even single-use silicone hydrogel lenses designed for daily disposal and replacement.
Allergic Response To Silicone Hydrogel Lenses
A number of blog sites and online forums contain complaints among contact lens wearers that they have developed allergy-like symptoms from wearing silicone hydrogel lenses.
The most common complaints are redness, discomfort, itchy eyes and greater lens awareness or dryness symptoms. However, these symptoms can also be caused by contact lens dryness or sensitivity to a new contact lens solution or care regimen.
Though silicone hydrogel lenses allow more oxygen to reach the surface of the eye, the added silicone can reduce the surface wettability of the lenses, potentially making it harder for them to stay moist on the eye.
To combat this tendency, new contact lens solutions have been developed that include special wetting agents to keep silicone hydrogel lenses hydrated for all-day wear.
Though lens wettability may not be a problem for most wearers, people with marginal dry eyes might notice dryness discomfort from silicone hydrogel lenses that they didn't experience with previous hydrogel lenses. This dryness-related discomfort can be mistaken as symptomatic of an allergy to silicone hydrogel lenses.
Because silicone hydrogel lenses allow more oxygen to reach the eye, some wearers might become more aware of their lenses for another, more paradoxical reason.
A factor in why soft contact lenses are so comfortable for many wearers is because the reduced oxygen supply to the front of the eye from wearing the lenses reduces the sensitivity of the corneal surface. When more oxygen is available by wearing highly oxygen-permeable silicone hydrogel lenses, it's possible the cornea maintains its normal sensitivity, making the wearer more aware there is a lens on his or her eye.
In fact, in a study published in late 2010 in Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, researchers found that when patients were fitted with silicone hydrogel lenses or refitted with silicone hydrogels to replace regular hydrogel contacts, the sensitivity of their cornea increased.
The study also found changes in corneal sensitivity among silicone hydrogel wearers when different lens care regimens were used.
The findings of the study led the researchers to conclude that the effect of soft contact lens wear on the functioning of the sensory nerves on the front of the eye "appears to be more complex than previously thought."
The study authors recommended additional studies be performed to investigate how ocular surface sensitivity varies after longer-term silicone hydrogel lens wear and whether sensory aspects of the cornea and conjunctiva contribute to the end-of-day discomfort commonly reported by wearers of hydrogel and silicone hydrogel lenses alike.
As for possible allergies to silicone hydrogel contact lenses, formal evidence of this is essentially nonexistent. As of this writing, it appears that no confirmed cases of allergic reactions to silicone hydrogel contacts have been reported to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the U.S. or to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the U.K., and no clinical reports of such occurrences have been published in peer-reviewed medical journals in either country.
Are Silicone Hydrogel Contact Lenses For You?
Most optometrists and ophthalmologists agree that the most obvious benefit of silicone hydrogel lenses is the reduction of hypoxia-related problems associated with soft lenses made of regular hydrogel materials.
This likely has resulted in fewer contact lens-related red eyes, discomfort and serious keratitis problems from wearing contacts for extended periods of time.
It's also likely that due to their increased oxygen transmissibility, silicone hydrogel lenses have enabled many people to comfortably wear contacts for longer hours than they could have with regular hydrogel lenses.
Silicone hydrogel materials also have enabled contact lens manufacturers to create a wider variety of lens designs while enabling a healthy amount of oxygen to reach the cornea for safe and comfortable daily or continuous wear.
However, silicone hydrogel lenses have not solved contact lens discomfort problems altogether, and, in fact, some people may experience more lens awareness when wearing silicone hydrogel lenses than when wearing regular hydrogel lenses.
Some studies have shown that silicone hydrogel lenses are more prone to certain types of contact lens deposits than regular hydrogel lenses, and some contact lens solutions may be less effective on silicone hydrogel lenses than they are on regular soft lenses.
Also, despite their increased oxygen permeability, silicone hydrogel lenses have been shown in some studies to be associated with a greater risk of corneal inflammation and other complications in some patients, compared with regular hydrogel lenses. Reasons for these apparent problems remain unclear.
Some experts also say that there is no hard evidence that the increase in oxygen supply to the eye when wearing silicone hydrogel lenses improves end-of-day wearing comfort, compared with wearing regular hydrogel lenses.
Finally, it's also noteworthy that currently the only soft contact lens that has been FDA-approved to be marketed as a contact lens for dry eyes is a regular hydrogel lens (Proclear; CooperVision), not a silicone hydrogel lens.
Because there are pros and cons to every contact lens material or design, the best way to determine if silicone hydrogel lenses are the right choice for you is to discuss all possible contact lens options with your eye doctor during your contact lens exam and consultation.
Annual Report: Contact Lenses 2014. Contact Lens Spectrum. January 2015.
Silicone hydrogels: were they really worth it? Contact Lens Spectrum. December 2011.
Risk factors for interruption to soft contact lens wear in children and young adults. Optometry & Vision Science. August 2011.
Effects of silicone hydrogel contact lens wear on ocular surface sensitivity to tactile, pneumatic mechanical, and chemical stimulation. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. December 2010.
Care regimen and lens material influence on silicone hydrogel contact lens deposition. Optometry & Vision Science. March 2009.
Alcon (data on file). 2009.
The absorption of major tear film lipids in vitro to various silicone hydrogels over time. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. January 2008.
Incidence of keratitis of varying severity among contact lens wearers. British Journal of Ophthalmology. April 2005.
Page published on Wednesday, February 27, 2019