Common eye disease and conditions
At ACUVUE®, our care for your eyes doesn't stop with perfecting your vision. As part of Johnson & Johnson Vision, we're dedicated to promoting comprehensive eye health, and that includes educating you about the conditions that could affect your eyes.
What’s a stye?
What causes styes?
What’s conjunctivitis?
What causes conjunctivitis?
What are eye allergies?
Eye allergy is inflammation caused by contact with irritants like pollen, mold, dust mites or pet dander. Eye allergies are a type of conjunctivitis.
What causes eye allergies?
What’s dry eye?
The name says it all. Dry eyes occur when your eyes don’t make enough tears or tears evaporate too quickly.
What causes dry eye?
What’s a cataract?
A cataract is a clouding of the lens of your eye.
What causes cataracts?
What’s glaucoma?
Glaucoma is the term given to a group of eye disorders that damages the eye’s optic nerve.
What causes glaucoma?
What’s age-related macular degeneration (AMD)?
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is an eye condition that can cause blurring, distortion, and vision loss or blind spots in your central vision.
What causes age-related macular degeneration?
Your vision, our mission
Your eye health journey is unique, and we’re here to support every step of the way. From providing world-class contact lenses to advanced cataract solutions, our family of products is designed to cater to your specific needs and help you live your life to the fullest.
Footnotes
*MyACUVUE® membership privileges are exclusively available at participating ACUVUE® Authorised Practitioners only. Terms & conditions apply.
Important information for contact lens wearers: ACUVUE® Contact Lenses are available by prescription only for vision correction. An eye care professional will determine whether contact lenses are right for you. Although rare, serious eye problems can develop while wearing contact lenses. To help avoid these problems, follow the wear and replacement schedule and the lens care instructions provided by your eye care professional. Do not wear contact lenses if you have an eye infection, or experience eye discomfort, excessive tearing, vision changes, redness or other eye problems. If one of these conditions occurs, remove the lens and contact your eye care professional immediately. For more information on proper wear, care and safety, talk to your eye care professional or download the Patient Instruction Guide.