Publication | Closed Access
Proton NMR relaxation in hydrogel contact lenses: correlation with in vivo lens dehydration data
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Citations
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References
1990
Year
A study of hydrogel contact lenses was undertaken to determine whether NMR relaxation data can be used as a predictor for on-eye lens dehydration. Proton NMR relaxation times (T1 and T2), were determined for a series of contact lenses for which on-eye dehydration data were also available. NMR relaxation times were found to depend upon lens water content, but the dependence was not monotonic. T1 values varied between 100 and 800 msec, and T2 values varied between 6 and 85 msec for the lenses studied. In this study, the NMR signal and corresponding relaxation times are average values, derived both from lens water protons as well as from exchangeable polymer protons. A simple analysis of the data indicates that the mobility of these protons varies by more than a factor of 10 for the lenses studied. A test for linear correlation between NMR relaxation rate, 1/T1 and relative change in lens water mass, % delta mw gave r = -0.830 for all data, and r = 0.904 if one lens was excluded.
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