• expired

Cyxus Blue Light Blocking Glasses for Teens $31.99 (20% off) + Delivery (Free with Prime/ $49 Spend) @ CyxusTechnology Amazon AU

00
IJRJWQYD
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

20% off;
Blue light blocking glasses for teens, protect eyes;
FDA and CE registered company

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

Related Stores

Amazon AU
Amazon AU
Marketplace
Cyxus Technology
Cyxus Technology

closed Comments

  • +2

    Blue Light Blocking Glasses for Teens

    Snake oil…

    Talk to any eye specialist and they'll tell you…

    Don't waste your money.

    eg.. https://www.rebuildyourvision.com/blog/vision-news/experts-a…

    • +1

      Huh? But these are Broken-resistant!

      • +1

        It's also misleading and deceptive

        NO worry about eye fatigue, blurred vision and headache.

    • +1

      But "…All of our products have been authenticated by the authoritative institutes. Eye doctors recommend wearing these blue light blocking glasses to protect your eyes…"

      • +1

        by the authoritative institutes

        …in North Korea.

        • The Dear Leader wears these?

    • The issue is, blue light causes damage. It may also cause worsening macular degeneration.

      https://www.macular.org/ultra-violet-and-blue-light

      Blue light glasses do not work for eye fatigue, blurred vision or headache. There is currently no evidence to show whether these glasses help or don't help avoid / minimise macular degeneration, though UV sunglasses do help. It has been suggested to research though…

      https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15302349

  • +3

    Why are these for teens? Oh, I see:

    "…you can also play a very good decorative effect, so you extraordinary temperament, quiet demeanor. These glasses allow the wearer to enjoy a classic, celebrated style while adding their own individuality…"

    And further appealing to teens:
    "…UV exposure will accelerate the aging of the eye, resulting in your old age when cataract…"

  • Watch out for the catch in the warranty condition…

    'repair or exchange for free (if not man-made damage)'

  • +3

    "Eye doctors recommend wearing these blue light blocking glasses to protect your eyes. "

    No they don't.

  • +3

    I don't know about these particular lenses, but I (in my capacity as an independent optometrist) have seen the "blue protect" type of lenses make a definite (positive) impact on eye fatigue, therefore improving comfort when on the computer for a significant period of time.

    Yes, I was doubtful of the lens makers' original claims when they first came out. But over the last two years I've seen too many of my patients appreciate and benefit from these lenses.

    But I'm just writing about the anti-fatigue benefits of the blue coating. I'm not commenting on the "health" benefits from the blue coating with respect to protecting from possible damage to the cornea/lens/retina/macula. In my opinion, the jury is still out on this, and I haven't seen categorical proof that the health benefits are there.

    I wrote that when the lenses first came out I was sceptical of the manufacturers' claims, until I actually used (prescribed) them and saw the resultant effects on my patients. Therefore if I was an optometrist or ophthalmologist who has never actually used these lenses, I would probably still be sceptical and a bit of a doubting Thomas about them.

    • +1

      Good input.

  • Will these stop teens watching blue movies?😉

  • All the "cool" teens are wearing them.

  • If blue light causes macular degeneration, we should see an AMD spike? Nope. Mice retina not same as human retina. Don’t be fooled

Login or Join to leave a comment