View clinical trials related to Hyperopia.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to compare subjective ratings of lens handling at insertion for a monthly replacement lens versus a daily disposable lens in habitual soft lens wearers.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the axis orientation of LID226397 toric contact lenses.
The purpose of this study is to assess long term performance and safety of AONDA in a real world setting when worn as daily wear or continuous wear for vision correction. This study will be used to support AONDA's marketability in Europe and other locations.
The study objective was to gather short-term clinical performance data for two soft contact lenses.
The clinical investigation objective is to evaluate safety and performance outcomes of trifocal IOL implantation to improve vision in patients with cataract and/or ametropia (hyperopia, myopia) and/or presbyopia. Retrospective data from preoperative status up to 12 month postoperative status will be collected from patients that were implanted with Medicontur's 640PM intraocular lens: - Preoperative status: Preoperative Screening and Baseline - Surgery: IOL implantation - M1: 1 month +/- 2 weeks postoperative follow-up - M3: 3 months +/- 1 month postoperative follow-up - M12: 12 months +/- 3 months postoperative follow-up
The objective of this study is to evaluate the product performance of a new silicone hydrogel daily disposable multifocal contact lens, the Bausch + Lomb (kalifilcon A) Daily Disposable Multifocal Contact Lens, when worn by current soft contact lens wearers on a daily disposable wear basis
This was a single-blind (participant masked), interventional, prospective, direct refit, bilateral wear short-term fitting study.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether uncorrected or corrected long-sightedness (hyperopia) has an impact on reading skills, in Grade 2 or Grade 4 school-aged children from Mashonaland Central province of Zimbabwe, compared to age-, gender- and school-matched children with no refractive error (emmetropia), measured by the Happy Readers V4 reading tool over six months.
Hyperopia is one of the commonest refractive errors encountered in ophthalmology practice. Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) has been widely used to correct hyperopia especially with the advent of femtosecond laser technology allowing larger flap creation suitable for peripheral hyperopic ablations with resultant predictable, effective, and safe refractive outcomes. However, the encountered LASIK flap complications encouraged many surgeons to assess efficiency and safety of surface ablation techniques such as photorefractive keratectomy (PRK) to correct hyperopia.
This is a multicenter study to compare the accuracy of IOL calculations in post-laser vision corrected eyes that are about to undergo or have undergone cataract surgery.