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1 urations with no interaction required by the wearer.
2  aids often fail to provide a benefit to the wearer.
3 ompromised comfort and breathability for the wearer.
4 a distance and fine-tuned by the hearing aid wearer.
5 unique personalized devices optimized to the wearer.
6 ience as an audiologist and as a hearing aid wearer.
7 step, which imposes large peak forces on the wearer.
8 igible mechanical and thermal burdens to the wearer.
9 ars of age) of 21 children who were not lens wearers.
10 alents; P < 0.001) than did non-contact lens wearers.
11 any geographic areas, mostly in contact lens wearers.
12 es in managing this population of vulnerable wearers.
13 tic CL (29.4%) and 490 (70.6%) refractive CL wearers.
14 signed to reduce the metabolic cost of their wearers.
15 itis (DS) affects over two-thirds of denture-wearers.
16 one quarter of patients were orthokeratology wearers.
17 tentials (eVEPs) in Argus II retinal implant wearers.
18  in a population of symptomatic contact lens wearers.
19 the denture and affects up to 50% of denture wearers.
20 ving 4,663 SCL years yielded 187 CIEs in 168 wearers.
21 ciated with corneal staining in contact lens wearers.
22 ater for contact lens wearers than spectacle wearers.
23 al length between spectacle and contact lens wearers.
24 rts of Fusarium keratitis among contact lens wearers.
25 earers and 33 (9.2%) were gas-permeable lens wearers.
26  dry eye is high, especially in contact lens wearers.
27 may assist in the management of contact lens wearers.
28 possible to optimize outcome for hearing aid wearers.
29 te and related symptoms reported by some PAL wearers.
30 m levels were significantly lower in denture-wearers.
31 yopia progression between SVL and former PAL wearers (0.06 D; P = 0.50).
32 n cosmetic wearers, compared with refractive wearers (1%; P < .005).
33 y eye disease (52.3%), followed by spectacle wearers (23.9%) and clinical emmetropes (7.1%).
34 nter, retrospective chart review of 3549 SCL wearers (8-33 years at first observed visit, +8.00 to -1
35  to wear spectacles; however, most spectacle wearers (81%) had inadequate correction.
36 ple days, and enables real-time inference of wearer activity with an accuracy of 96% through a traine
37 fidence interval = 7.55-20.26) and spectacle wearers (adjusted odds ratio = 2.06, 95% confidence inte
38 ions compared with those of non-contact lens wearers, although the exact cause(s) of this increased s
39 onsidered properly masking as protecting the wearer and interlocutor equally, removing the mask entir
40 7+/-9 years; range, 5-33 years) contact lens wearers and 20 age-matched control subjects.
41      Overall, 327 (90.8%) were hydrogel lens wearers and 33 (9.2%) were gas-permeable lens wearers.
42 ness was 46.3 +/- 4.7 microm in contact lens wearers and 50.9 +/- 4.7 microm in control subjects (P =
43 ol group, whereas 88% of former contact lens wearers and 77% of former glasses wearers were strongly
44 ural rehabilitation programs for hearing aid wearers and cochlear implant recipients have recently be
45 kscatter did not differ between contact lens wearers and control subjects (P > 0.05).
46 l infection, commonly occurs in contact lens wearers and may lead to vision impairment.
47 the adjusted difference between contact lens wearers and spectacle wearers was not statistically sign
48  It is commonly associated with contact lens wearers, and prevalence is increasing at an alarming rat
49 ilm thinning rates in 20 normal contact lens wearers, and spectra were captured at a rate of 4.5 per
50 rry vision symptoms reported by contact lens wearers are caused by poor quality of the retinal image
51 rly, when combined with hand hygiene, and if wearers are compliant.
52 outcome was SARS-CoV-2 infection in the mask wearer at 1 month by antibody testing, polymerase chain
53 perior implant locus may help the prosthesis wearer better control horizontal eye movements, which ar
54 research has shown that multifocal spectacle wearers (bifocal and progressive addition lenses [PALs])
55 t reduce the SARS-CoV-2 infection rate among wearers by more than 50% in a community with modest infe
56                                              Wearers carrying an IL-12B SNP had an increased risk of
57 ntions tailored to the needs of Contact Lens Wearers (CLWs) are important and necessary.
58 ate of Acanthamoeba disease (9%) in cosmetic wearers, compared with refractive wearers (1%; P < .005)
59  Thirty-nine neophytes and soft contact lens wearers completed the study.
60             Corneal staining in contact lens wearers continues to be a frequent, but not well underst
61                 Compared with noncosmetic CL wearers, cosmetic CLs wearers were significantly more li
62 ing problems: frequent battery replacements, wearer discomfort, high costs, complicated setup, furnit
63                           Edentulous denture-wearers eat fewer fruits and vegetables than do comparab
64  The sensor samples 1-5 uL of sweat from the wearer every 1-5 min and reports sweat glucose from a ma
65 e combination challenges that some spectacle wearers experience on a regular basis.
66 arding the degree to which masks protect the wearer from airborne particles.
67 exhaled infectious aerosol or to protect the wearer from inhaled infectious aerosol, depends on facto
68      Twenty corneas of 20 daily contact lens wearers (&gt;10 years' duration) and 20 corneas of 20 age-m
69                                 Contact lens wearers had a significantly higher aqueous humor flow ra
70      It is well documented that contact lens wearers have much higher incidences of corneal infection
71            Only 2 patients were contact lens wearers: however, they presented with history of trauma.
72 udicated to consensus by reviewers masked to wearer identity, age, and SCL parameters.
73 sion of the QIRC among refractive correction wearers in Malaysia using Rasch analysis.
74 the quality of life of refractive correction wearers in Malaysia.
75 , demonstrating continuous operation without wearer intervention and autonomous longitudinal analysis
76 dies have examined particle emission by mask-wearers into the surrounding air.
77 al salience of the focal actor: the body cam wearer is typically less visually salient when depicted
78 y eye disease classification in contact lens wearers is moderate.
79 ecreased corneal sensitivity in contact lens wearers is not accompanied by decreased nerve fiber bund
80                       If the diet of denture-wearers is to be improved, psychosocial factors, as well
81 eye disease primarily affecting contact lens wearers, is caused by free-living amebae, Acanthamoeba s
82                          Twelve contact lens wearers (mean age, 32.7 years; four males) inserted etaf
83        In this database of soft contact lens wearers, myopia progression was common for subjects in t
84  eyes (64 % of these were habitual spectacle wearers), need for improvement was present in the young
85 NA analysis identifies the presumed maker or wearer of the pendant as a female individual with strong
86                                          Ten wearers of silicone hydrogel contact lenses were asked t
87 nitial and end-of-day wear among young Asian wearers of silicone hydrogel contact lenses.
88 pants aged 20 to 24 years who were satisfied wearers of silicone hydrogel daily disposable contact le
89  measured hearing aid outcome in 173 elderly wearers of single-channel, linear, in-the-ear hearing ai
90 sive set of outcome measures from 53 elderly wearers of two-channel, wide-dynamic-range compression,
91              None was a corneal-contact lens wearer, one had previous cataract surgery and another su
92  sense and report the state of health of the wearer or the status of their environment.
93 C (0.87 mg/dL) were also lower among denture-wearers (p < 0.05).
94  of serious infections, such as contact lens wearers (P = 0.21) or patients with human immunodeficien
95 onths were not different between PAL and SVL wearers (P = 0.92).
96     From a database of 815 soft contact lens wearers, patients were identified whose age was between
97         A series of symptomatic contact lens wearers presenting consecutively to a large hospital cli
98           In contrast, among dentate denture-wearers, prevalence ranged from 18.7% in >/= 65-year-old
99  medical procedure masks' source control and wearer protection efficacies are boosted about 30% each
100 ssion and with laboratory-derived source and wearer protection efficacy estimates for a variety of fa
101 tion arises through protection of uninfected wearers (protective effect), via reduced transmission fr
102 t they could also provide some protection to wearers (protective effect).
103                             The contact lens wearers removed their lenses 12 to 24 hours before the e
104 and can also modulate localized changes in a wearer's body temperature by nearly 10-fold.
105 timated potential energy fluctuations of the wearer's center of mass.
106    Wearable health sensors could monitor the wearer's health and surrounding environment in real-time
107  sensors on the skin to reliably monitor the wearer's health over a period of weeks.
108 n sweat, tears, or saliva as indicators of a wearer's health status.
109                When the oximeter detects the wearer's percentage of hemoglobin saturated with oxygen
110 ectrochemical biosensor that conforms to the wearer's skin.
111                          Rigid gas permeable wearers should avoid exposing their lenses to tap water
112 chlamydia and conjunctivitis in contact lens wearers should be treated with antibiotics.
113 the explanatory variables (sex, contact lens wearers, smoking, oral contraceptives, screen time) prov
114 e activities and facial features of the mask wearer so that the mask performance for real-world appli
115  via reduced transmission from infected mask wearers (source control), or both.
116 n on top of a block, 20 long-term multifocal wearers stepped down (from different block heights) onto
117             The torque feedback provides the wearer temporal and spatial information during a motion
118 thinner in corneas of long-term contact lens wearers than in control subjects.
119 orneal sensitivity was lower in contact lens wearers than it was in control subjects (P = 0.05) and d
120 was 0.06 D per year greater for contact lens wearers than spectacle wearers.
121 cal environment imposes a heat stress on the wearer that is itself a safety risk.
122 unds pose potential health risks to the mask wearer through dermal contact or inhalation.
123 ould decrease disease transmission from mask wearers to others.
124  reduced if the robot is personalized to the wearer using human-in-the-loop (HIL) optimization of wea
125 liance characteristics were compared between wearers using CLs for cosmetic purposes and those using
126 matically after the perspiration to keep the wearer warm.
127 e between contact lens wearers and spectacle wearers was not statistically significant (95% confidenc
128 e of carrots and tossed salads among denture-wearers was, respectively, 2.1 and 1.5 times less than f
129 emporal keratocyte densities in contact lens wearers were 22,122 +/- 2,676 cells/mm(3) (mean +/- SD)
130 xamined by confocal microscopy (contact lens wearers were excluded).
131         Both eyes of 20 adapted contact lens wearers were imaged when they wore two types of silicone
132                   Lenses worn by cosmetic CL wearers were more likely to be hydrogel materials and ma
133                                 Contact lens wearers were most likely to report dry eye disease (52.3
134 d lenses from nine asymptomatic contact lens wearers were processed in a manner similar to controls.
135            Four hundred fifteen contact lens wearers were recruited and enrolled in this phase of a l
136  adjustment for age and gender, contact lens wearers were shown to be more likely to experience frequ
137 ed with noncosmetic CL wearers, cosmetic CLs wearers were significantly more likely to be female (90%
138 ntact lens wearers and 77% of former glasses wearers were strongly satisfied with LASIK at year 3.
139                       Fifty non-contact lens wearers were studied.
140  the question of personal protection to mask wearers when others are not wearing masks and not the qu
141 e levels and associated disease risks to the wearer, which should warrant the attention of the genera
142 lated from the cornea of a soft contact lens wearer who had keratitis.
143 n may be advantageous for elderly multifocal wearers who have a high risk of falling.
144  modifiable risk behaviors identified in RGP wearers who wore lenses for both orthokeratology and non
145 ger bone lengths and the joint angles of the wearer with a simple stretch-based sensing mechanism.
146               Six hundred and ninety-four CL wearers with corneal infection presented: 204 cosmetic C
147               Controls were RGP contact lens wearers with no history of AK who were at least 12 years
148 obial keratitis were less likely to occur in wearers with the nonmutated IL-6 haplotype (severity OR,
149 ely to fall than are nonmultifocal spectacle wearers, with this risk further increasing when negotiat

 
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