i have a patient who brought her lenses back in saying shes allergic to the brown tint, and wants it changed to rose. ive never heard of such a thing but i suppose it could be true. anyone have experience with this and any advice on how to proceed?
i have a patient who brought her lenses back in saying shes allergic to the brown tint, and wants it changed to rose. ive never heard of such a thing but i suppose it could be true. anyone have experience with this and any advice on how to proceed?
people have been allergic to weirder stuff so I can believe it.
Like it raises her histamine levels allergic? Or it makes her see things weird?
An organic replacement for brown dye is coffee :) Works
idk im getting this secondhand. symptom unknown i would imagine breaking out her cheekbones beause this is a rimless design with a very large B measurement.
Hmm I guess I could see it
Allergic to the tint of the lens - as in the actual color? Sounds dubious at best. Allergic to a chemical compound in the lens or frame? More plausible...
i had a lady who had a reaction to a certin brand of AR. it wasnt ar in general, just thus one brand , odd but true.
Paul:cheers:
Negative Uilleann. (refrain from the sarcasm please)That would be called abrasions and someone would need to be taken behind the woodshed.
Take a razor blade and scrape it up and down on your cheek a bit and see if you cant create "chafing" similar to a allergic reaction to nickle or far as pt is concerned, tint. Pt does not know if its being caused by lens edge or color of the lens. But we know the difference.
Oh come on - lighten up. We've all seen and heard much silliness in our decades behind the dispensing desk, and a bit of tongue in cheek never hurt anyone. Still, If you can possibly find any way to show a direct correlation to the actual color of the tint (not the chemicals it's made from), and an allergic reaction, I think you can retire a wealthy man!
allergy - not likely at all as they just change physical characteristics of transduction of light to signal ratios - but it is very common to have physical problems due to visual stimulus (including tints). For instance body Ph may vary (easily measured), arousal levels can change, synesthetic effects possible, timing modifications may be unpleasant. Dorsal stream and magnocellular effects are often seen. Cognitive changes can be catastrophic. Yes, giving the wrong tint can cause problems, and it is a pity that the range of effects are generally not known about by optical professionals.
Been doing this for over 30 years...the meter is pinging and the problem is 2 inches below the crown of the head.
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