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  • [INTRO]

  • [What happens if you leave your contacts in for too long?]

  • If you wear contact lenses, your doctor probably told you not to wear them for too long,

  • and there are a lot of good reasons for that.

  • A student in England, for instance,

  • tried to take her contacts out with dry eyes after leaving them in for 10 hours

  • and ended up ripping off part of her cornea.

  • Another student in Taiwan (why is it always students?)

  • left contacts in for six months, which created the perfect environment for bacteria and amoebas to burrow into her eye.

  • Ugh.

  • Just got to get the nice outside-of-your-eyes lenses. These are good.

  • So even though contacts are generally safe to wear,

  • they do come with lots of biological risks if you don't follow your doctor's instructions.

  • Contact lenses work like glasses do: bending light, so it focuses properly on the photoreceptors at the back of your eye,

  • which send information to your brain. Contacts sit right on top of your cornea.

  • That's the outermost layer of transparent tissue that helps focus light entering your eye

  • and protects everything else from things like dust, germs and UV radiation.

  • There are two main dangers to leaving your contacts in for too long.

  • For one, the cells on your cornea are alive and need to stay wet, so you have a built-in moisturizing system.

  • You have glands that coat your eyes with tears,

  • which are a mix of water and things like oils, nutrients, immune cells, and mucus-related proteins,

  • but contacts can interfere with this tear layer by soaking up moisture or keeping it from getting to your eyes' cells.

  • Dry eyes can get really irritating, and could lead to corneal damage.

  • And second, leaving contacts in for too long can increase your risk of getting an eye infection from some nasty microorganisms.

  • Contacts that have been sitting on your cornea for a while can cause physical scratches that damage your cells

  • or reduce the flow of oxygen that cells need to survive,

  • and then if you didn't wash your contacts well enough with a disinfecting solution,

  • any bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites hanging around can get into the damaged cornea tissue.

  • With enough time these, these pathogens can multiply and cause a full-blown cornea infection, generally called keratitis.

  • Keratitis usually starts with Inflammation and pain as your body tries to fight it off, but it can get really bad without treatment.

  • If your cornea gets too damaged, you can even lose your eyesight.

  • But even if you are really good about following instructions,

  • scientists have discovered that using contacts regularly for long periods of timelike more than five yearscan affect your eyes, too.

  • Several studies have found that long-term contact use can reduce the thickness of your cornea.

  • It's not necessarily bad, but enough of a shape change could affect your vision or prevent you from getting laser eye surgery safely.

  • We're not exactly sure why this thinning happens,

  • but it might have something to do with the reduced amounts of oxygen affecting how the tissue grows.

  • So you might wear contacts for lots of reasons like convenience, appearance or to have closer to normal vision.

  • Even though leaving them in for too long can get really bad,

  • the risks are generally small as long as you are careful to do what your doctor tells you to do.

  • Thanks to our Patreon patrons for asking,

  • and if you want to learn more about vision science, you could check out our video that explains how glasses don't really ruin your eyesight.

  • [OUTRO]

[INTRO]

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