13
Apr

I just got contacts a couple days ago but I'm scared about what will happen if I accidently put one in that is inverted.

I've been pretty good about being able to tell but I just want to know incase I ever make a mistake. What will happen? Will my vision just be blurry in that eye or what?


Answer:
Its not the end of the world if you put it in backwards, and your right, your vision will just get blurry so you can tell right away. At most you’ll get a little bit of an irritated eye because its sitting wrong so after you take it out let your eye have a couple minutes to rest.

Answer:
You definitely won't be able to see out of it clearly, and it might irritate your eye a tiny bit. It won't be painful, but you will definitely be able to tell you put it in the wrong way.

The ideal way to tell is to look at the contact on your finger before you put it in. If the edges curve inward and the contact looks like a little bowl, you've got it the right way. If it looks slightly mishapen or the edges curve outward, you've got it the wrong way. If you follow that rule, you'll never have to worry about putting them in wrong. :)


Answer:
It won't be blurry, but you'll be able to feel it. Make sure you check the contact on your finger before you put it in. If it looks like a bowl, it's correct. If it looks like a bowl with some weird little dip in the bottom, it's inside out. I've accidentally put them in the wrong way. I promise though, it's nothing to be scared about. Once you get more used to it, you could probably try putting it in inside out just so you'd know what it feels like. It's pretty uncomfortable. Good luck!

Answer:
If you put in a contact the wrong way then it will be very uncomfortable in the eye. It will seem as if something were in your eye the way it feels if a piece of hair is there. It is simple to tell, just make sure the lens is in the shape of a perfect bowl, some have letters of the manufacture on them which when the right way they are a certain way.

This entry was posted on Monday, April 13th, 2009 at 12:22 pm and is filed under Optical. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

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