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Sixty percent of the
161 million Americans who wear prescription eyewear choose eyeglasses.
Wearing eyeglasses is one of the simplest ways to correct
vision problems.
To see images clearly, light rays must
focus directly on the retina, the light-sensitive nerve layer
that lines the back of the eye.
There are different kinds of focusing problems, called
refractive errors, which may require corrective lenses.
In the case of myopia or nearsightedness, the eye is too
long. Light rays
focus before reaching the retina and images appear blurry. In hyperopia or farsightedness, the eye is too short, so light
rays have not yet focused when they reach the retina. Astigmatism describes an eye with a cornea that is oval shaped
instead of round, causing light rays to hit the retina in more
than one place.
Eyeglass lenses compensate
for an eye that is too long or too short by adding or subtracting
focusing power. The lenses create just the right amount of focusing power so
light rays focus directly on the retina.
A plus (+) in front of
the first number of the eyeglass prescription means the lens corrects
farsightedness. A minus (-) in front of the first number means the lens corrects
nearsightedness. If
a second and third number are present in the prescription, they
indicate astigmatism. The
higher the first number in the prescription, the greater the correction
in the lens.
Lenses are available
in glass, regular and high index plastic, and polycarbonate.
Although they scratch less easily, glass lenses tend to
be heavier and often slide down the nose.
Plastic and polycarbonate lenses are lighter and safer
than glass but scratch easily.
Scratches cannot be removed but they can be avoided or
minimized with appropriate care.
Scratch resistant coatings can be applied to plastic and
polycarbonate lenses but some of these coatings crack if exposed
to extreme heat or cold
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