1. The Effect of Sunglasses on Ocular Exposure to Ultraviolet Radiation.
- Author
-
Rosenthal, Frank S., Bakalian, Alexander E., Lou, Changqi, and Taylor, Hugu R.
- Subjects
- *
EYE protection , *SUNGLASSES , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of ultraviolet radiation , *EYESTRAIN , *RADIATION exposure , *EYE care , *PROTECTIVE eyeglasses , *EYE examination , *SLIT lamp microscopy - Abstract
Abstract: Thirty-two pairs of inexpensive sunglasses were examined for their effectiveness in preventing ultraviolet radiation (UVR) from reaching the eyes. The transmission of UVB (290-310 nm) by all of the sunglass lenses was < 2 per ¢. However, in measurements performed with mannikins wearing the sunglasses, up to 14.1 per ¢ of the incident UVR passed through to the eyes. When the sunglasses were moved 6 mm from the forehead, the per ¢ reaching the eyes ranged from 3.7 to 44.8 per ¢. Although sunglasses are somewhat more effective than untinted prescription eyewear in attenuating ocular exposure, the amount of attenuation is highly variable and depends mainly on their size, shape, and wearing position. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF