CONTACT LENS

A hydrophilizingly coated silicone contact lens has a radial cross-section of the inner face (1), the rim portion contour of which is convex (7) between a point of inflection (6) and the outer edge. For its manufacture, a silicone precursor is brought between a female and a male mold and is polymerized, and the polymerized contact lens is released from the mold by means of a liquid swelling same and is completed after a PECVD/CVD-coating without edge cutting.

The present application relates to a “soft” contact lens with excellent wearing properties.

Conventional contact lenses, e. g. those known from the German utility model publication G 87 10 765 U1, have a radially inner part made of a harder material, and a radially outer part made of a softer material. The inner surface is entirely concave and the outer surface entirely convex, i.e. both surfaces have a positive Gaussian curvature. This known lens is not satisfactory with regard to its wearing comfort.

It is also known to apply a hydrophilic coating to a contact lens made of poly(methyl methacrylate), PMMA (U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,924). Still, the wearing comfort of such lenses is not perceived as satisfactory.

The invention aims at providing a contact lens having good or even excellent wearing comfort, and a method for its manufacture.

This problem is solved by a contact lens made of silicone, wherein a radial cross section on the inner face has a rim region between a point of inflection and the outer edge in which the cross section contour is convex, in particular with a radius of between 0,1 and 10 mm. Because of this rim contour, the lens particularly readily slips onto the tear liquid film.

In embodiments, the contact lens has a surface layer made of a hydrophilic material auf, which further improves on the wearing comfort.

According to another aspect, the problem is solved by a process in which a silicone precursor material is brought in between a female and a male mold and is polymerised, and the polymerised contact lens is removed from the mold by means of a liquid swelling the contact lens and completed without edge cutting. Thereby the occurrance of a cutting edge, which might be perceived as irritating, is avoided.

In embodiments, the raw lens thus obtained is hydrophilized in a combined PECVD/CVD-process, whereby particularly thick coatings are achieved.

The general shape of a contact lens is shown in Figures la and lb: The inner face1facing the cornea, which face, in use, floats on a film of tear liquid, is concave in its central part Z, namely rotationally symmetric-aspheric with a conus coefficient of about −0.1to −0.5, thus somewhat elliptically pointed. In principle, this face also may deviate from the rotational symmetry if required by the physiological conditions. The outer face2of the lens is naturally convex with radius somewhat deviating from that of the inner face in magnitude, in order to provide the desired dioptric power. In the outer rim portion R, the curvatures or radii, respectively, deviate from the central values in the following manner: On the outer face, an annular part4with stronger (inward) curvature, thus smaller radius, is radially contiguous to the central portion. To this part, another may be outwards contiguous which is again less curved, conical (thus non-curved) or slightly outwardly (i.e. negatively) curved portion5. In terms of magnitude, the curvature here is always less (i.e. the radius larger) than in the first mentioned transition region4, i.e. the lens smoothly terminates.

The inner face1also has an annular region radially contiguous to the central region with the elliptical face, which, however, is less curved, thus more flattish, corresponding to a larger radius of curvature in this region. Herein, the radius of curvature in a sectional plane is meant, which plane contains the optical axis of the lens. The line formed by the inner face and the sectional plane forms a point of inflection6, i.e. the curvature of the line first becomes zero and then positive. For the Gaussian surface curvature, this means a transition to negative values. To this region, the region7is contiguous, where the inner face of the contact lens approaches to the global tangential plane; here, the curvature in the main section perpendicular to the radial sectional plane is zero, so that the Gaussian surface curvature becomes zero and still further outside, in the immediate edge region, again transitions to positive values.

Between these two points (in the sectional plane) or lines (on the surface) of curvature inflection6and7there is a region in which the contact lens gradually lifts, when viewed radially from inner to outer region, from the cornea. This region is crucial for the wearing comfort. As recognized by the inventors, in this region there should neither be formed an overly sharp edge, which might interrupt the film of tear liquid present on the cornea or might even cut into the cornea; nor should the rim region have an outwardly pointed, protruding, strongly curved edge (“Skispitzen-Profil”), which might irritate the eyelid slipping onto it from outwards during blinking. Rather, the annular regions according to the invention, smoothly transitioning towards an outer edge free from any sharp edges, (seeFIG. 2) achieve an unperturbed floating of the contact lens onto the tear liquid film and at the same time enable an unperturbed slipping of the eyelid onto the contact lens. It was found that the radius of the inner face, i.e. the inverse curvature, along the radial sectional plane, is for example between 0,1 and 4 mm, or above 0,5 mm on the one hand or/and below 2 mm on the other hand. The radial extension of the negatively curved area region may be 1 μm to 1 mm, for example more than 10 μm on the one hand or/and below 100 μm on the other hand. The outer edge itself may include, instead of one acute angle8, two obtuse angles, between which an approximately cylindrical outer rim region9extends for e.g. 10-30 μm as discernible fromFIG. 2.

InFIG. 3, a fluorescence diagram of a surface coating is shown, as maybe applied for hydrophilizing the per se hydrophobic silicone base material of the contact lens. The core part of the lens consists of poly(dimethylsiloxane) with a Shore-A hardness of 25. In this example, for the purpose of analysis an applied PAA-(poly acrylic acid) layer has been stained with the fluorescence dye Rhodamin 6G, and the depth extension of the fluorescence has been determined by confocal microscopy. As can be seen, the entire thickness (line width) of the PAA coating is several tens of μm. The lens thickness at the measurement position (line spacing) is 118 μm. The coating was made by PECVD followed by CVD. During the plasma coating phase the pressure ratio was changed from an initially prominent Argon excess (>10:1) towards a similarly prominent Argon deficiency (<1:10) near the end, at decreasing total pressure. This conditioning step was followed by an on-top-polymerisation of water-free acrylic acid from the vapour phase at its normal vapour pressure, without action of a plasma and without the presence of a noble gas. The initially plasma-enhanced provided layer had a thickness of 20-30 nm, i.e. in the order of magnitude of about one part per thousand of the entire layer thickness. Such layers have optically as well as physiologically excellent properties due to the strong hydrophilicity. The contact angle of the applied layer in water is less than 10° and typically 2-5°. The beneficial shape effects of the according to the invention are targeted supported by this treatment of the material.

InFIG. 4, a flow diagram of a process according to the invention is shown. Initially, a female and a male mold are provided, and a precursor material for poly (dimethylsiloxane) is brought into female mold, closed with the male part, and polymerized at a temperature between 15° C.-160° C. for 12-720 min. S1(molding). After the closing, the mold parts are rotated with respect to one another by 180° or another angle sufficiently large)(>20°, as long as the reaction mixture is just viscous (over 1000 cP; typically ca. 4000 cP), so that excess silicone is reliably separated and displaced into the annular space between the mold parts. In this separation, the rim contour described above is created due to the effect of the surface energy, allowing the dispensing with an edge cutting step or other edge treatment creating a cutting edge (e.g. punching). For demolding, the contact lens is partially swollen with an alkane such as e.g. hexane or another nonpolar or little polar solvent S3, so that it releases S5without mechanical action from the mold and the manufacturing parts. The dipole moment of the solvent should not be more than 0,2 Debye to this end. In support, an ultrasonic bath may be employed. The starting material may be a liquid 2-component silicone by NuSil with a DK-value of above 700 barrer. If desired, the lens is transferred after evaporating the solvent in a vacuum into a coating chamber and initially is cleaned with an Argon plasma (ca. 1 min) and prepared. Then, a phase S7with a slight Argon excess 1:1 to 2:1 (partial pressure ratio) with respect to acrylic acid vapour follows, the latter obtained from water-free acrylic acid. Exemplary pressures are 0,03 Torr for Argon and 0,015 Torr for acrylic acid. This phase, which takes 10 to 90 min, is followed by an about ten-minute phase at closed Argon supply and further reduced acrylic acid pressure (ca. 0,1 mTorr). Then, the plasma generator is switched off, and the lens is exposed at room temperature to the saturation pressure of the acrylic acid, until a turbidity indicates the completion of the process (about 5 min). The contact lens is watered for 24 h in a hydrophilic liquid, for example in isotonic saline solution, to remove potential remainders of the coating agent, and is steam sterilized at above 120° C.

InFIG. 5, a two-part mold is shown, which is suitable for carrying out the above described process. The lower, female part10initially accommodates the reaction mixture and is then closed with the upper, male part12, wherein a space11filled with the reaction mixture remains between them. The lower part10has chamfers13′,13″ facilitating the fitting together and separating the mold parts10and12. The annular space is indicated as14.

From the proceedings of the process an irregularity of the outer results insofar as it deviates from an exact circle line, other than known e.g. from punched lens contours. Because also the cornea never has exactly regular contours, this deviation from an ideal shape not only is not detrimental, but even has beneficial effects on the wearing comfort. The amount of the irregularity may be quantified by assigning, by calculation, an ideally approximating circle line to the projection of the outer rim, according to the criterion of a minimum sum of the squared deviations. The, the average square deviation is a measure of the irregularity, and is at least 5000 μm2(converted to magnitudes: about 1% of half the lens diameter), but in embodiments may be more than 1000 μm2or more than 10000 μm2.

The contact lenses formed according to the invention may be used as cover lenses, i.e. with or without refractive power for physically protecting the cornea from irritations. This may be useful as a flanking, itself non-therapeutic measure for a medicinal-therapeutic eye treatment.

In the subsequent claims, “mainly consisting” is understood as amass proportion of more than 50%, in particular of more than 90% up to entirely. “Curvature” is in each case the inverse radius of curvature, i.e. the radius of the approaching circle, wherein the sign is positive for convex surfaces and is negative for concave surfaces. The Gaussian surface curvature is the product of the two principal curvatures, thus is negative when both the principal curvatures have different signs (saddle surface), and is zero when one or both principal curvatures are zero (e.g. cylinder and conus surface).

The skilled person will realize that deviations from the embodiments described above are possible without leaving the scope of protection of the appended claims.