Daily replacement lenses from a silicone hydrogel material. Lens offers UV A and UV B protection.
Daily Disposable Convenience Plus the Health of Silicone Hydrogel
Now your patients with presbyopia can enjoy all the convenience of a daily disposable and the healthy advantages of silicone hydrogel (SiHy) in one lens—clariti® 1 day multifocal from CooperVision. It’s the only SiHy daily wear lens for presbyopia available today.
For your patients, silicone hydrogel means whiter eyes and a healthier** lens-wearing experience. The clariti 1 day lens allows 100% corneal oxygen consumption***. In fact, it provides more than the recommended amount of oxygen**** across the entire lens surface to help maintain ocular health.
And for your practice, clariti 1 day multifocal lets you expand what you have to offer with a lens you can prescribe with confidence.
AquaGen™ Technology Leads to Excellent All-Day Comfort
CooperVision clariti 1 day multifocal features AquaGen™ technology, a process that creates a hydrophilic lens with optimal wettability.
AquaGen is a non-surface treatment technology that manipulates the structure of hydrophobic silicone molecules so they become hydrophilic. This creates a lens that naturally attracts and binds water molecules, holding them tightly to the lens surface. AquaGen also provides continuous wettability throughout the wearing time. The result is a lens with high water content***** that provides excellent all-day comfort for your patients.
Talk to your patients about the healthy advantages and daily convenience of clariti 1 day multifocal, the world’s only silicone hydrogel, daily disposable contact lens for presbyopia.
*Warning: UV-absorbing contact lenses are not substitutes for protective UV-absorbing eyewear, such as UV-absorbing goggles or sunglasses, because they do not completely cover the eye and surrounding area. Patients should continue to use UV-absorbing eyewear as directed.
**Data on file; clariti 1 day offers whiter eyes than 1-DAY ACUVUE® MOIST®.
***Brennan N.A. Beyond Flux: Total Corneal Oxygen Consumption as an Index of Corneal Oxygenation During Contact Lens Wear. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 2005; 82:467–472.
****Holden B.A., Mertz GW. Critical oxygen levels to avoid corneal edema for daily and extended wear contact lenses. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science. 1984; 25:1161.
*****Manufacturer’s quoted core water content.