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Progressive lenses, also called progressive addition lenses (PAL), progressive power lenses, graduated lenses, no-line bifocals, and varifocal lenses, are corrective lenses used in eyeglasses to correct presbyopia and other disorders of accommodation. They are characterised by a gradient of increasing lens power, added to the wearer's correction for the other refractive errors. The gradient starts at a minimum, or no addition power, at the top of the lens and reaches a maximum addition power, magnification, at the bottom of the lens. The length of the progressive power gradient on the lens surface is usually between 15 and 20 mm with a final addition power between 1.00 to 2.50 dioptres for most wearers. The addition value prescribed depends on the level of presbyopia of the patient and is closely related to age.
[edit] HistoryThe first patent for a PAL was British Patent 15,735, granted to Own Aves with a 1907 priority date[1]. Aves' patent included the progressive lens design and the manufacturing process. However this was unlike modern PALs. It consisted of a conical back surface and a cylindrical front with opposing axes in order to create a power progression. This design was never commercialized. While there were several intermediate steps (H. Newbold appears to have designed a similar lens to Aves around 1913), there is evidence[2] to suggest that Duke Elder in 1922 developed the worlds first commercially available PAL (Ultrifo) sold by "Gowlland of Montreal". This was based on an arrangement of aspherical surfaces. The Varilux lens was the first PAL of modern design. It was developed by Bernard Maitenaz, patented in 1953, and introduced by the Société des Lunetiers (that later became part of Essilor) in 1959. Early progressive lenses were relatively crude designs but modern sophisticated progressive lenses have gained greater patient acceptance and include special designs to cater to many separate types of wearer application: for example lenses may be customized for use with computers, or to offer enlarged near and intermediate view areas. Over the 1980s through today, manufacturers have been able to minimize unwanted aberrations by:
Today the complex surfaces of a progressive lens can be cut and polished on computer-controlled machines, allowing 'freeform surfacing', as opposed to the earlier casting process. [edit] Advantages and use
[edit] DisadvantagesDistortion: Progressive lenses suffer the disadvantage of the power progression creating regions of aberration away from the optic axis, yielding poor visual resolution (blur). As the lenses combine a range of powers in a single surface there are also geometric distortions to the visual field, which increase with the addition power. Some wearers find the visual discomfort caused by these distortions outweigh the benefits of wearing PALs. However, manufacturers claim acceptance rates of 90%–98%. Clinicians generally agree that in order to avoid adaptation problems it is best to start wearing progressive lenses early in the development of presbyopia (around 45 years of age for most people) while the prescribed addition powers are low. The wearer can then adapt to the increases in a series of steps in addition power over a number of years as their presbyopia progresses. Fitting: Progressive lenses require careful placement relative to the wearers pupil centre for a distance'-viewing reference position. Incorrect specification of the fitting location can cause problems for the wearer including narrow fields of view, clear vision in one eye only, on-axis blur, and the need to adopt uncomfortable head positions. Availability: Progressive lenses use highly complex proprietary curves in combination with the patient's basic bifocal prescription. All lens-curve types—there are hundreds—are not available from all opticians. A patient may be able to get what is prescribed from few local opticians, or only from the prescribing optometrist. Cost: Progressive lenses are sold at a significantly higher price than bifocal and single-vision reading spectacles. Availability issues can increase cost, especially when low-cost opticians cannot dispense the prescribed proprietary lens-curve type. Because of the relatively narrow vertical band of prescriptively accurate optics characteristic of progressive lenses, wearers may have some difficulty becoming used to the coordination of horizontal head movement necessary to retain focus when reading across a computer screen or a paper page. This is particularly true when the reading add power is strong (+2.00 or above). The experience has been described as "moving your head back and forth as if you are watching a tennis match". This can be mitigated by using high quality lenses, and by having your glasses made and fitted by a competent optician who is experienced in fitting progressive lenses. It is also beneficial to avoid the shallow eyeglass frames (i.e. the frames with very small vertical dimension) and choose a frame that is somewhat larger instead. There is no such thing as a perfect progressive lens. Selection involves multiple tradeoffs among near, mid, and far vision quality and in factors which empirically affect visual ease-of-use.[3] [edit] Other notes
[edit] References
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