As well as the most basic contact lenses.
With 25 years of hard-to-fit contact lens experience, we can confidently guarantee that your contact lens success will be much better with the doctors of Insight.
If for any reason you are not satisfied with your contact lenses, we will gladly refund any fees collected for the materials—typically the more expensive portion of the contact lens charges. Professional service fees are non-refundable.
Our Insight tells us one-day or single use disposable contact lenses are the most comfortable, safest, and affordable contact lenses anyone could ever want. They provide great vision, you never have to use cleaning solutions, you have a fresh, clean, comfortable lens everyday, and you eliminate virtually any chance of infection.
These disposable contact lenses are designed to be worn for one day or a single use before disposal. They are the most successful and have the least complications.
These disposable and reusable contact lenses are designed for daily use but must be removed before bedtime. Most disposable contact lenses are to be removed and cleaned daily, and replaced every two weeks. Traditional daily wear contact lenses may be reusable and require specific care solutions that are used every night.
These disposable contact lenses are designed to be worn for six days without removal. While extended wear lenses work perfectly for many lens wearers, they aren’t right for some, especially patients who need higher levels of oxygen transmitted to the corneal surface due to illnesses like diabetes, certain medications or poor tear quality. The FDA approved EW lens usage for up to 6 consecutive nights.
Continuous wear contact lenses are similar to extended wear lenses in terms of ease of use and comfort. However, these lenses are designed for use for as many as 31 consecutive days without removal. As with extended wear lenses, they aren’t suitable for all contact lens wearers, and should only be used after consulting with one of our doctors.
Toric contact lenses are made from the same materials as regular (“spherical”) contact lenses, so they can be either soft or rigid gas permeable (RGP). The difference is in the design of the lens. Toric lenses have two powers in them, created with curvatures at different angles (one for astigmatism, the other for either myopia or hyperopia.) There’s also a mechanism to keep the contact lens relatively stable on the eye when you blink or look around. To provide crisp vision, toric contact lenses cannot rotate on your eye.
Multifocal contact lenses offer users both good near and distance vision. Some offer a bifocal design with two distinct lens powers, while others have a multifocal design with a gradual change in lens power. Multifocal contacts are available in both soft and rigid gas permeable (RGP or GP) and are designed for daily wear or extended (overnight) wear.
Specialty contact lenses are sometimes required for certain patients, particularly patients recovering from certain types of eye surgeries and patients for whom other types of contact lenses are unsuitable.
Dr. Bank received his Bachelor’s degree from the University of Louisiana in Monroe, Louisiana with a major in Health Sciences and a minor in Physics. While attending UL Monroe, Dr. Bank was selected to Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities and was elected to Alpha Epsilon Delta, an Academic…
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