Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to determine if increased complications exist among patients with diabetes as compared with individuals without diabetes who wear soft disposable contact lenses for daily wear. Complications among daily-wear contact lens wearers who have worn soft contact lenses for 1 year or more were reported from a retrospective review of records. Eyes from 254 patients with diabetes and 254 individuals without diabetes (control), one eye for each subject, from six clinical practices were compared using χ 2 and exact Wilcoxon analyses as appropriate. The overall incidence of complications was 49.8% among eyes of patients with diabetes and 48.0% among controls. The respective values for occurrence of corneal abrasions were 7.9% and 5.9%, those for corneal staining were 3.2% and 5.5%, and those for pain at some time while wearing a contact lens were 17% and 19.7%. No significant difference in complications, corneal abrasions, corneal staining, or experience of pain was found between daily-wear contact lens wearers with diabetes and controls. Thus patients with diabetes showed no increased complications over patients without diabetes for daily-wear soft contact lens wear.
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