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The hard contact lenses include gas permeable and the conventional hard lenses. Soft contact lenses include daily wear, extended wear, and disposable wear. These are all great contacts, although you should check with your optician to see what he recommends. If you are just starting to wear hard contact lenses or have thought about them in the past, you ll need a 2 - 4 week break period, where you will gradually wear the contacts longer and longer with each passing day. There are ways that you can get the most from your contacts, and ensure that they remain comfortable for as long as you wear them. Below, you will find some tips on how to get the best from your contacts. To ensure that your contacts remain healthy, you should always replace them as required by the manufacturer or type of contacts you are using. Before you decide to buy a pair of extended wear contact lenses, you should make sure that they are right for you. When you get fitted for your contacts by your eye doctor, be sure to ask him about these types of contacts and whether or not they are best for you. If you take the time to research what is best for you and look into your options - you ll find that extended wear contact lenses may indeed be the best contacts for your money - and your health. Then, before you put it back in your eyes, you should put some solution on it and it should go in your eye without any complications. Anytime you are not wearing your contact lenses, you should always soak them in fresh solution. This is especially important overnight, as the solution gets the protein out of your contacts. A lot of contact lens users feel that the cheaper brands of contacts are reliable, dependable, comfortable, and above everything else - affordable. Even though cheap lenses are praised by some - others don t look at them that way. Some feel that cheaper lenses should be avoided at all cost, for the fear that they may damage vision or not offer the same quality that the higher priced brands of contacts offer. GP (Gas Permeable) contacts are made from a combination of fluorine and silicone, meaning that they won t attract protein near as much as other types of contacts. If you have had a problem with protein on your lenses in the past, GP contacts will pretty much eliminate that problem. Keep in mind, you ll still need to clean your GP lenses, in order to keep them free of protein, debris, and to keep them comfortable when you wear them.
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