Cooper Vision

There are many forms of hard contact lenses. Cooper Vision contacts can improve your eye sight. Hard contact lenses help correct your vision by smoothing out any irregular curves on the front part of your cornea, providing a new spherical front surface for your eye. They also have a prescription built into them. Hard contact lenses can correct nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism. They can also correct vision in an eye that has had a cataract problem. Hard contact lenses can take some time to get used to. It might feel at first as if you have small pebbles in your eyes. But after some time, you may begin to adapt to the discomfort.

CooperVision

Cooper Vision soft contact lenses are soft, flexible, and made of water-absorbing plastic. These lenses contain at least 50 percent water. The water can come from either your normal tears or from the solution in which you store the contacts. Soft contacts from Cooper Vision are flexible and larger than hard contacts, and they let the corneas breathe more normally. They’ll float on a layer of tears in your eyes.

Soft contacts by Cooper Vision help your eyelids as long as the lenses are in the eyes. There is less of an edge for the eyelid to rub against the eye every time you blink, thus they are more comfortable. Your eyes can get used to wearing Cooper Vision soft contact lenses very quickly. You don’t have the weeks or even months of build up time that you would need with some other types of contact lenses.

CooperVision Soft Contact Lens

After just a few days of wearing Cooper Vision contact lenses all day, you’ll rarely, if ever, even notice you’re wearing contact lenses. That’s why so many people wear contact lenses today—including Cooper Vision lenses.

Another type of contact lens is the extended-wear lenses. These lenses can be worn comfortably all day and are soft contact lenses. Extended-wear lenses can typically be worn comfortably all day, all night, and all day and all night, for an extended period. Scientists knew that such a lens would have to be thinner than a regular soft contact lens, have a higher water content, and allow even more oxygen to pass through their surfaces. When these extended wear contact lenses were introduced, there was much hype and fanfare. And now that extended wear contact lenses are much improved since the time they were first introduced, they are ready to be worn!

 
Contact Lense » Contact Lenses » Cooper Vision
 
Full List of Contact Lense Guides
 

© Copyright 2007 ContactlenShop.com All Rights Reserved.