What Are Smart Contacts?
The Future of Smart Contact Lenses
What else could smart lenses do shortly?
Glucose Monitoring
Glucose monitoring contact lenses offer diabetics a noninvasive way to track their blood sugar levels. These lenses contain special sensors that measure glucose concentration in a person’s tears. They provide continual glucose detection and real-time monitoring.
Information on glucose levels is collected by a sensor embedded in the smart lens, which is sent to the lens wearer’s smartphone. The person can then use the recorded measurements to track fluctuations in blood sugar levels and help control their diabetic condition.
Medical Treatments
Imagine if you could improve your eye health just by wearing contact lenses. Here are some ways a smart lens could make that a reality:
- Allergy relief – It’s estimated that as many as 40% of Americans have eye allergies, also called allergic conjunctivitis. If you’re in this group, you know how uncomfortable itchy, watery, sore eyes can be, especially if you wear contacts. In 2022, the FDA approved the first contact lens with the antihistamine ketotifen added to the lens material to relieve eye allergies.
- Treat injuries to the cornea – The cornea is the clear layer at the front of your eye that focuses light to help you see clearly. Researchers are experimenting with a contact lens that helps heal corneal injuries, such as corneal scratches, having a foreign body in your eye, and chemical burns.
- Treat other eye issues – An Australian university is developing a contact lens that can help heal corneal ulcers, which are open sores on the cornea. This new lens has corneal cells on its inner surface, which come into contact with the eye.
- Treat eye conditions – Some companies are working on a smart lens that can deliver medicine directly to the eye to treat eye health problems like glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy, which is an eye condition affecting people with diabetes that can cause vision loss and blindness.
Vision Improvement
The majority of contacts available today provide vision correction. But shortly, smart contacts could do more, such as:
- Magnify images – A prototype of a contact lens has been developed that can switch between normal and magnified vision. The lens, which is just 1mm thick, has mirrors that form a telescope within the contact lens, allowing for vision magnification. These smart contact lenses could help people with low vision, which is reduced sight that can’t be corrected with glasses, contacts, or any other treatment methods.
- Manage presbyopia – One company is developing switchable-focus contact lenses for people with presbyopia (an age-related condition that makes it difficult to focus on things up close and at arm’s length). This lens could help wearers see clearly at these distances.
- Enhance color vision – Contact lenses that correct color blindness do exist, but they’re not customized for the wearer. To address this concern, personalized color-enhancing contacts are in development.
- Sense the pH of tears – Research is underway to create contacts that can monitor the acidity or alkalinity (the pH) of tears. If the pH level of your tears is too high or too low, it can indicate an eye health issue.
Augmented Reality Functions
Augmented reality (AR) uses technology like software, applications, and AR glasses to bring digital content into your real-world surroundings.
A smart contact lens for AR has been made with a 3D printer. This type of lens could be used for GPS navigation to give you real-time directions and to play games without using your smartphone.
Smart contact lenses have the potential to positively impact the quality of life for people with vision impairments, to offer convenient access to information, and to play a role in early disease detection. It could be years until some of this technology is available for mainstream use. Until then, we’ve got you covered with a wide variety of contact lenses for your prescription and lifestyle.