h a l f b a k e r y"This may be bollocks, but it's lovely bollocks."
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(Thanks for that one, [World].)
There are specialised materials around that can come into contact with the eye without causing irritation. Contact lenses are made out of such material, for example. A pair of tweezers tipped with such a substance might help get this damn eyelash out of my eye.
Pac Man
http://www.hereandt...ics/1982-inside.jpg Shown here eating objects commonly found in one's eye, while producing his happy munching sound. [Amos Kito, Nov 06 2004]
[link]
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"Step 1: poke in eye" With a product like that you'll need a full time staff of product liability lawyers. On the other hand, I can think of few HB ideas that wouldn't. |
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Contact lenses do cause irritation to the eye, the eye just becomes desensitised over the course of a few days to the presence of a foreign body. Used as a once-off like this, the tweezers would have no appreciable benefit comfort-wise. The specialised materials that contact lenses are made from are nothing more than oxygen-permeable plastics or silicone-hydrogels, like omafilcon-A or balafilcon, for example. |
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Wet fingers don't seem to work for me. Eye baths are good, though. |
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I thought that (soft) contact lenses are made out of a polymer that attracts the protiens in the fluid on the surface of the eyeball, so they sort of bond to the eye. Having never worn them, I can't say. |
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I think I remember a story about perspex pilots goggles shattering frequently, and the pieces were found not to cause much irritation. Somehow, this led to contact lenses. |
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[Detly], the bonding of tear-film proteins to the lens material is the biggest problem facing contact lens manufacturers at the moment....if it wasn't for this issue, contacts could be worn indefinately. It's a drawback, and certainly not the mechanism by which the lenses stay on the eye. |
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The perspex-in-eye story is true, but it led to the invention of intraocular lenses (used in cataract extraction surgery), not contact lenses. |
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Perhaps they could simply stick iron filings to each hair. If any fall in your eyes, hold a strong magnet to your eye and it will fly out! |
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"And in this part of the Nanomagnetics and Spin Laboratory we have a high powered electromagnet used for various research projects. Here, I'll switch it on, and show you a few things."
"Oh no..." |
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//tweezers tipped with such a substance// |
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Don't use tweezers -- the premise of your idea is contact lense comfort. A contact lense could be designed to collect foreign objects in the eye. "Pac Man" [link] might be a suitable shape. |
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//specialised materials//
What? Like the inside of the eyelid? Tweezers tiped with the inside of pig eyelids should do the trick. |
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