What is peroxide disinfection of soft contact lenses?
During normal wear, dirt, protein particles, and germs can get on
soft contacts. Peroxide disinfection kills the germs, which can
cause serious eye infections. The two-step method uses hydrogen
peroxide and a neutralizing solution. The rest of the cleaning
process removes substances that may shorten the life of the lenses
or irritate your eyes.
When is it used?
To prevent infections, you must disinfect soft contacts every time
you remove them. If you have daily-wear soft contacts, you will
clean and disinfect your lenses every night. If you have
extended-wear soft contacts, you will clean and disinfect them every time
you take them out (at least once a week). Many eye care
professionals recommend removing any type of contact lenses before
sleeping, regardless of the type of lens. Ask your eye doctor what
he or she recommends.
There are several ways to disinfect soft contact lenses. If your
doctor recommends the two-step peroxide method, follow the basic
procedure of cleaning, rinsing, disinfecting with the hydrogen
peroxide solution, neutralizing the hydrogen peroxide, and rinsing
again.
How is peroxide cleaning done?
To properly clean and disinfect your lenses, you will need:
- a daily cleaning solution
- a hydrogen peroxide solution
- a solution for neutralizing and rinsing
- the lens basket and vials designed for your hydrogen peroxide
system
- the catalyst disc that comes with the system.
To clean your lenses, follow these steps:
- Wash your hands before you remove your lenses. Always handle
your lenses gently (soft contacts can tear). Be sure to keep
track of which is the right lens and which is the left. It
helps if you always handle the right lens first.
- Cleaning: Remove the right lens and put it in the palm of your
hand facing up (like a bowl). Pour a few drops of daily
cleaner over the lens. Using one finger, rub the lens back and
forth. The daily cleaner helps dissolve dirt and oils.
- Rinsing: Either cradle the lens in your fingertips or leave it
in your palm, and rinse it thoroughly with the sterile saline
rinsing solution.
- Put the right lens in the side of the basket marked with an R.
If you are using this system for the first time, you will need
to put a catalyst disc in the lens basket according to the
instructions. (Later, after 90 uses or whenever the product
instructions indicate, you will need to change the catalyst
disc.)
- Repeat steps 2, 3, and 4 for the left lens. Then fill the
vial to the line with peroxide solution and put the lens
basket in the vial. Let your lenses soak in this solution
for the recommended time (usually 10 to 15 minutes).
- Remove the lens basket from the vial and rinse the lenses
with the sterile saline rinsing solution. Pour the hydrogen
peroxide solution out of the vial. Then refill the vial to
the line with the rinsing solution. Remember that the basket
must have a catalyst disc attached. Soak the lenses in the
neutralizing solution with the catalyst disc for the
recommended time (usually 6 hours) or overnight.
- Before you put your lenses in your eyes, wash your hands.
Remove the lenses, one at a time, from the rinsing solution.
Use the sterile saline solution to rinse the lenses thoroughly,
then put them in.
- Rinse the vial and basket thoroughly with tap water. Either
dry them or let them air dry.
Are any other cleaning procedures necessary?
Your doctor may recommend periodic enzyme cleaning to help remove
protein deposits. Enzyme cleaning is usually done once every week
or two. Use the enzyme cleaner on the same day each week to help
you remember when to do it.
Most enzyme cleaners come in tablet form. Use your enzyme cleaner
as directed, then clean, disinfect, and rinse your lenses before
putting them in your eyes. Some enzyme tablets can be put right in
the hydrogen peroxide soak. Check the product information
carefully before using any enzyme cleaner with your hydrogen
peroxide cleaning system.
What solutions should I use?
There are many different contact lens care products on the market.
Your doctor will recommend certain products based on what is best
for your contacts and safest for your eyes. Sometimes other
products would work equally well. Other times using different
solutions may irritate your eyes or discolor your lenses. Always
check with your doctor before changing contact lens solutions.
Also, read carefully the instructions that come with your contact
lens products.
Never use homemade solutions to clean or store your lenses.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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