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Meet Mercedes’ new S-Glasses!

July 29th, 2007 by statuseyecare


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Meet Mercedes’ new S-Glasses!

Mercedes unveils new eyewear collection

Mercedes eyewear

Latest product wearing three pointed star: Sunglasses

You’ll be seeing stars with these new glasses – they’re made by Mercedes and have the famous three-pointed emblem on the bridge.
The German firm has unveiled a collection of 40 optical frames and shades produced with renowned Italian eyewear company Allison SpA.

They are made from lightweight materials including titanium, aluminium and acetate, and as a result should be very comfortable.

Some frames have a grid pattern on the rim that mimics Merc’s familiar slatted grille. The top-of-the-range specs feature special graduated ‘Skylet Road’ lenses, which provide maximum shading of 80 per cent at the top. Other models have polarized lenses to help reduce glare.

The Mercedes glasses are available at selected opticians, priced from £105.

Source: http://www.autoexpress.co.uk


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Start wearing sunglasses early, and they may help to preserve your sight in later life

July 24th, 2007 by statuseyecare


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For decades, doctors have warned about the dangers of going out in the sun. Slap on a hat, slip on a shirt and slop on the suncream to protect your skin from harmful rays and avoid getting cancer, they say.

But what about the eyes? If sunlight burns skin, what does it do to the cornea, lens and retina? Most people wear sunglasses for comfort or to look cool. But perhaps there is a more pressing reason – to save our sight.

Should the advice be; wear shades or risk going blind? One of the world’s best-known scientists, James Watson, a Nobel prizewinner and the discoverer of the DNA double helix, seems to think that is exactly what the risk is.

At the opening of the Wellcome Medical Museum in London last month, he was extolling the benefits of genetic research. In May, he became the first person to be presented with his entire DNA sequence on a disc, potentially allowing him to identify genetic defects that could put him at risk of disease.

Asked if there were any downsides to such research – something he is notably reluctant to admit – he had his answer ready. Analysis of his genome might have revealed a vulnerability to, say, macular degeneration, which is the most common cause of blindness.

“I could have seen the [gene] sequence when I was in my fifties and worn dark glasses for the rest of my life. But I am now 79, and I don’t have macular degeneration. So it would have been unnecessary – based on incomplete information,” he said.

It was a deliberately frivolous point, intended to suggest that the worst the new genetics could foist upon us was the inconvenience of wearing dark glasses. But the assumption that lay behind it was that dark glasses can protect eyes from premature ageing, in the same way that suncream can protect the skin. They may even, Watson implied, prevent vulnerable people from losing their sight.

The facts about blindness are chilling. By the age of 80, more than half of Americans either have a cataract or have had cataract surgery. A cataract occurs when the lens in the eye becomes cloudy, blurring the vision. Treatment is by surgery, to replace the lens with an artificial one made from plastic.

Age-related macular degeneration affects about 500,000 people in the UK. It occurs when cells in the centre of the retina at the back of the eye become damaged. Symptoms are the loss of central vision and visual distortion. Both conditions are most common in the elderly – and as we live longer, the numbers affected are growing. The eyes, in common with other organs, need protection if they are to last. Some eye specialists say that protecting the eyes of children is the most effective way to prolong 20-20 vision into old age.

Ian Anderson, an optometrist and the chairman of the Eyecare Trust, a charity devoted to promoting eye health, said: “Your eyes can be damaged by ultraviolet light. There are two types in sunlight – UVA and UVB. UVA sunlight penetrates quite deeply and can damage the lens and the retina. People should be aware that they need to wear dark glasses and do more to protect their eyes.”

People who have fair skin are at greatest risk. They have less pigment and their eyes are thus most vulnerable to UV light, while dark-skinned people are better protected.

But it is a myth that blue-eyed people are more sensitive to light and therefore more vulnerable to eye damage. The iris is almost opaque, although there are differences in the amount of pigment in the retina, Anderson said.

Children are worse off because their eyes are young and the lens and vitreous – the fluid behind the lens – are clearer, so the light goes straight through and goes on to hit the retina.

“Children need sunglasses, but parents need to be careful that they are not toys with tinted lenses. That causes the iris to open and let more light through. Parents need to be very careful to buy sunglasses with the right CE marking to show that they filter out UV light. It is more important to wear sunglasses when young to protect the eyes.”

In older people, as the lens of the eye ages, it creates more glare. “It becomes like a frosted window – this is called ‘veiling glare’. A lot of older people have incredible problems driving when the sun is low or it is reflecting off wet roads,” Anderson says.

If sunglasses are necessary to protect the eyes from damage, why are they not the subject of health promotion campaigns? The answer, according to Andrew Lotery, professor of ophthalmology and a specialist in macular degeneration at Southampton University, is that the case for shades is unproven.

“It has been a hypothesis for decades [that exposure to sunlight damages the eye]. There have been large-scale epidemiological studies; for example, of fishermen who are exposed to a lot of light reflected off the sea. There is no evidence of an increase in macular degeneration. That link has been looked for, but it has not been found.”

Some experts say that blue light is more damaging to eyes, but this too has not been proved, Lotery says. “One concern was that when cataracts were removed, the blue light filters present in the natural lens were removed also. Now, all replacement lenses have blue light filters,” he says.

For certain people with rare eye conditions, such as retinitis pigmentosa (an inherited condition that causes degeneration of the retina), excess light can be damaging. “I advise these patients to avoid sunlight and wear dark glasses,” Lotery says.

A juvenile form of macular degeneration called Stargardt’s disease, which affects one in 10,000 children, is also affected by light. Experiments in mice show that they are protected when raised in the dark. Lotery says: “Most ophthalmologists would recommend sunglasses for this group.” But he’s sceptical about suggestions that we all need protection: “I don’t think, for the general population, that the evidence is there.”

Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/


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Is your health a fashion victim?

July 24th, 2007 by statuseyecare


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THE list of things we worry about when we get dressed is endless: if it’s not how big our bum looks in the latest micro-mini, then it’s how to conceal a muffin-top when wearing skinny jeans. With such potential sartorial disasters hovering in our wardrobe, the last thing on our mind is the risk clothes and accessories pose to our health and safety.

Yet most of us have at some time slipped on the stairs while rushing around in stockinged feet or taken a tumble when a skirt hasn’t stretched as far as our legs would like it to. The list of potential fashion-related health hazards is as long as the scarf which led to the unfortunate demise in 1927 of American dancer Isadora Duncan, when it got caught in the wheels of the open-topped car in which she was travelling, dragging her to her death.

Even those of us less flamboyant in our accessorising can put ourselves at risk in vehicles: almost half the women questioned in a recent insurance company study admitted choosing shoes to match their outfit, rather than for safe driving.

And, even if we avoid an accident, we often risk our long-term health for the sake of keeping up appearances. New research from the College of Optometrists shows that people in this country are far more concerned with the fashion status of their sunglasses than whether they can protect the eyes against harmful UV rays.

Read on to discover more potential dangers lurking in your wardrobe - and how to avoid them.

YOUR SUNGLASSES

In Hollywood, statement shades are really a force-field to protect celebs from the gaze of the public, rather than the sun’s harmful UV rays.

But, while being precious doesn’t damage your health, if you’re going to join the year-round obsession with wearing shades, then make sure they’re up to scratch because wearing non UV-absorbing lenses actually does more damage than not wearing sunglasses at all.

This is because behind a tinted lens, the pupil opens wider, allowing more UV light than normal in. This reduces the eye’s natural protection against temporary but uncomfortable sunburn-like conditions. Long-term exposure may contribute towards cataracts later in life.

DAMAGE LIMITATION: Don’t want to sacrifice style or break the bank to invest in the best for your health? No problem - you can easily find sunglasses on the high street carrying the CE mark and labelled with British Standard BS EN 1836:1997, which ensures a safe level of UV protection.

Also, cover up your shades before you chuck them into the bottom of your handbag - the Eyecare Trust says scratched lenses scatter the sun’s light, which could cause glare around the damaged area. Keep them in a case to avoid wear and tear; clean regularly with a mild detergent and water and dry with a micro fibre cloth - not paper - to prevent scratching the lens.

Complete article : Here


Mail Us at info@statuseyecare.com or Contact Us at +919322679910 or Vist Our Showroom At Status Eye Care , Shop No 5-a, Modi Chawl, Station Road, Santacruz-west ,Mumbai-400054 , India For More details

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