Services  /  Contact Lens & Computer-Use Dry Eye
Co-Managed With U Optical

Contact Lenses, Screens, and Dry Eye

Modern life is hard on the tear film. Contact lenses sit directly on the oil layer your eye depends on, and hours of screen time cut blink rate by more than half. Together they accelerate evaporative dry eye in ways that eye drops alone can’t fix. UDEI works alongside U Optical to treat the cause — not just the symptom.

50%
of contact lens wearers
report dry eye symptoms
66%
drop in blink rate during
sustained screen use
7+ hrs
daily screen time linked
to digital eye strain
Both
lenses and screens drive
evaporative dry eye together
About this condition

Why Lenses and Screens Dry the Eye

A contact lens is foreign tissue floating on your tear film — it splits the film into layers, interferes with the oil layer from the Meibomian glands, and mechanically irritates the lid margin every time you blink. Long-term lens wear is one of the strongest known risk factors for Meibomian gland dropout, the structural end-stage of chronic dry eye.

Screens make it worse in a different way. Focused attention drops the blink rate from a resting 15-20 per minute to as few as 5-7, and the blinks that remain are often partial — the upper lid never fully meets the lower. The tear film dries in patches between blinks, the surface becomes inflamed, and vision starts to fluctuate through the workday.

Patients often blame one or the other — “my lenses just don’t work anymore” or “I’m on the computer too much.” In reality most patients have both factors driving the same underlying evaporative dry eye, and the solution is rarely to abandon lenses or careers. It’s to fix the surface so both are tolerable again.

Why early treatment matters for lens wearers

Long-term lens wearers lose Meibomian glands faster than non-wearers — this is well documented on meibography. The glands that are still full-length when you walk in are the ones we can save. Waiting until the discomfort is severe often means losing glands that can’t be regrown.

The good news: most lens and screen dry eye is reversible. Stabilise the surface, optimise the glands, update lens material and replacement schedule, and build in blink and break habits at the desk — and most patients keep their lenses and their workdays without the burn.

Symptoms

Signs Your Lenses or Screens Are Driving Dry Eye

Lens- and screen-related dry eye is pattern-driven — it gets worse as the day goes on, improves when you stop, and flares in specific environments. If any of these feel familiar, the surface is telling you something:

  • Lenses feel fine at insertion but become itchy or gritty by late afternoon
  • Having to take lenses out earlier than you used to, or switching to glasses by evening
  • Burning, fatigue, or pressure behind the eyes after long meetings on screen
  • Intermittent blurred vision that clears when you blink hard — and returns in seconds
  • Redness that builds through the day, especially under fluorescent or air-conditioned office environments
  • Headaches or neck tension that track your screen time more than your glasses prescription
  • A sense that no lens solution or artificial tear gives more than brief relief

If two or more of these match your day, it’s worth an assessment. The underlying problem is treatable — and usually doesn’t require giving up your lenses or your screen-based work.

Diagnosis

How We Assess Lens & Screen-Related Dry Eye

A UDEI assessment for a lens-wearing or screen-intensive patient looks at the whole picture — lenses, habits, workstation, and the structural state of the glands themselves. Findings are shared with your optometrist at U Optical where lens-related changes are part of the plan.

Lens & Lifestyle History

We map lens type, material, replacement schedule, solution, wearing hours, and daily screen exposure. This often pinpoints the moment the surface started to fail — and which modifiable factors to address first.

Meibography & Lid Margin Imaging

Long-term contact lens wearers routinely show measurable Meibomian gland loss on infrared meibography, often well before symptoms become constant. We image both lids to quantify dropout, show you exactly what’s still structurally intact, and flag whether continued lens wear is safe at the current material and schedule.

The images are also the foundation of the conversation with U Optical — lens changes are easier to justify when the gland pattern is visible and concrete.

Tear Film & Blink Analysis

We measure tear break-up time, osmolarity, lipid layer thickness, and blink completeness. Lens wearers and heavy screen users typically show short break-up times and a high rate of incomplete blinks — both directly addressable with targeted treatment and simple workstation adjustments.

Gland Expression & Lid Margin Health

We evaluate the quality of meibum and the health of the lid margin itself — areas disproportionately affected by chronic lens wear and long hours on screens where blink pressure is reduced. Healthy glands release clear oil; compromised glands yield thickened, turbid, or absent secretions.

Joint Plan With Your Optometrist

The plan we build combines surface treatment at UDEI with lens-fitting adjustments at U Optical — different material, different replacement schedule, daily-disposable moves, or a scleral-lens conversation where indicated. Screen habits and ergonomic changes round out the picture.

Treatment options

How We Treat Lens & Screen-Related Dry Eye

Treatment is layered: stabilise the surface, optimise the glands, address lens-specific factors alongside U Optical, and adjust screen habits. Most patients don’t need to stop wearing lenses or stop working on screens — they need the surface to stop losing ground.

At the same time, small changes to lens material, modality, and wearing schedule — coordinated with your optometrist — often produce disproportionate gains. And a handful of workstation habits (20-20-20 rule, conscious blinking, humidified air) make the other treatments last.

UltraView DEL™ (IPL)

Intense pulsed light therapy calms inflammation at the lid margin and restores Meibomian gland function — a workhorse for lens wearers and heavy screen users whose glands are inflamed but still structurally intact.

Most common pattern

Lens Optimisation with U Optical

Switching to a daily-disposable modality, a more breathable material, or a reduced wearing schedule — chosen with your optometrist based on what our meibography shows. Often the single most impactful change for a lens wearer.

Co-managed with U Optical

Meibomian Gland Expression

Mechanical clearance of obstructed glands for patients with moderate to severe dysfunction and insufficient response to thermal treatments alone.

Blocked glands
Learn about Meibomian Gland Expression →

Lid Hygiene & ZoHx

Professional lid margin cleaning and microbial biofilm reduction for patients with coexisting blepharitis or chronic lid margin disease.

Lid margin disease
Learn about ZoHx →

Prescription Drops

Anti-inflammatory or immunomodulatory drops to calm the chronic inflammation that lens wear and incomplete blinks drive. Used alongside in-clinic therapies for comprehensive control.

Adjunct therapy

Workstation & Blink Coaching

Practical, evidence-based changes: the 20-20-20 rule, conscious complete blinks during screen work, humidified air, glare and airflow control, and monitor positioning. Small habits with large effects on the tear film.

Every lens wearer / screen user

Most patients keep their lenses, keep their screens, and stop being uncomfortable all day. The combination matters more than any single treatment.

Connected care

Your Lenses, Your Surface, Your Team

Lens-related and screen-related dry eye rarely sits in one specialty. Care moves across the UVG network depending on what your eye needs next:

Your optometrist & lens fitting. U Optical handles lens material, modality, and fitting decisions based on what our meibography and tear film analysis show. Changes often pay off within a few weeks.

Tired of lenses entirely? Patients who’ve had enough of daily lens wear often start considering laser vision correction with U Eye Laser Cosmetic — and in our experience, contact-lens intolerance is one of the most common reasons people walk through UELC’s doors. What many don’t realise is that the same Meibomian gland dysfunction making their lenses uncomfortable will follow them through surgery if it isn’t addressed first. That’s why UDEI stays involved before and after laser: see Refractive Surgery & Dry Eye for the full co-managed protocol. A stable tear film is a prerequisite for the best laser outcomes — and for keeping them.

Home care and daily-use products. U Shoppe stocks the preservative-free lubricants, warm compresses, and lid hygiene products we actually recommend — the same ones we use in clinic.

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Usually no. Most patients continue wearing lenses after treatment — often more comfortably than before, because the underlying surface disease is finally being addressed. Sometimes a change in material, replacement schedule, or daily wearing time is enough. Only in more advanced cases do we recommend a lens holiday while the Meibomian glands recover, and even then it’s usually a pause, not a permanent stop.

Often, yes. Daily-disposables deliver a clean, fresh surface every morning — no preservative exposure from solution, no protein or lipid build-up over weeks, and no mechanical wear on a single lens. For many dry eye patients the switch alone produces meaningful improvement, which is why this is one of the first coordinated changes we discuss with U Optical.

There’s no single number. What matters is how your eye behaves under that load. A blink rate below 10 per minute, incomplete blinks, and visible tear break-up on imaging are the markers we watch for. For most patients the practical fix isn’t less screen time — it’s better habits (20-20-20 rule, conscious complete blinks, humidified environment, and glare control) layered on top of in-clinic surface treatment.

Temporarily. Artificial tears supplement the tear film but don’t address the underlying Meibomian gland dysfunction that screen work accelerates. Used alone they provide short bursts of relief; used as part of a plan that treats the glands themselves, they become an effective maintenance tool.

Sometimes, yes. Scleral lenses rest on the white of the eye, vault over the cornea, and hold a reservoir of preservative-free saline against the ocular surface all day. For patients with severe surface disease who still want to wear lenses, they can be a game-changer. We coordinate scleral-lens conversations with U Optical where appropriate.

The dysfunction often is — blocked glands can be cleared, inflammation can be calmed, and meibum quality can improve. The dropout is not. Meibomian glands that have fully atrophied do not regenerate. The structural glands that are still present on meibography are the glands we can protect — which is why earlier assessment preserves more of what you have.

Blue light itself is not a proven cause of dry eye — but the behaviour that comes with screens is. Reduced and incomplete blinking, prolonged focus, and dry indoor air combine to dry the ocular surface. Blue-light coatings may help comfort for some patients, but they don’t replace blink and break habits or treat the Meibomian glands.

They can be. Some preservatives in multi-purpose solutions irritate sensitive eyes, and older solution chemistry can accumulate on lens surfaces. Switching solutions, switching to hydrogen-peroxide systems, or moving to daily-disposables can all help. We discuss the right option with your optometrist at U Optical based on your specific findings.

OHIP covers standard ophthalmic examination; advanced diagnostics and in-office procedures are specialised services not covered. Extended health insurance often covers some prescription drops and in-office treatments. UDEI provides itemised receipts.

Refer any contact-lens wearer whose comfort has decreased despite well-fit lenses; any patient with visible Meibomian gland dropout or chronic lid margin disease; any heavy screen user with fluctuating vision or persistent end-of-day dryness; and any pre-laser-vision-correction candidate with marginal tear film stability. Early referral is easier to resolve than established, long-standing surface damage.

Keep your lenses, keep your workday

Comfort in lenses, clarity on screens.

If your lenses no longer feel right, or if your workday is defined by burning, blurry eyes, the surface is telling you something. A UDEI assessment — coordinated with your optometrist at U Optical — is the first step toward a plan that treats the cause, not just the symptom.