Researchers develop contact lenses that may correct Color blindness
CAPTION
Rose-tinted contact lenses (about 10 mm in diameter) containing gold nanoparticles filter out problematic colors for people with red-green color blindness.
CREDIT
Adapted from ACS Nano 2021, DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c09657
Color vision deficiency (CVD) is an ocular congenital disorder that affects 8% of males and 0.5% of females. The most prevalent form of color blindness affects protans and deutans and is more commonly known as "red–green color blindness". Since there is no cure for this disorder, the patients of colour blindness opt for wearables that aid in enhancing their color perception.
Tinted glasses can help patients with colour blindness, but they can't be used to correct blurry vision. And dyed contact lenses currently in development for the condition are potentially harmful and unstable. Now, in ACS Nano, researchers report infusing contact lenses with gold nanoparticles to create a safer way to see colors.
Some daily activities, such as determining if a banana is ripe, selecting matching clothes or stopping at a red light, can be difficult for those with color blindness. Most people with this genetic disorder have trouble discriminating red and green shades, and red-tinted glasses can make those colors more prominent and easier to see. However, these lenses are bulky and the lens material cannot be made to fix vision problems. Thus, researchers have shifted to the development of special tinted contact lenses.
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