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Lyndon Jones
Researcher at University of Waterloo
Publications - 498
Citations - 18249
Lyndon Jones is an academic researcher from University of Waterloo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Contact lens & Lens (optics). The author has an hindex of 59, co-authored 481 publications receiving 14265 citations. Previous affiliations of Lyndon Jones include University of Alabama at Birmingham & Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A solid-phase assay for the quantitation of total protein eluted from balafilcon, lotrafilcon, and etafilcon contact lenses
TL;DR: AB on NC demonstrated the most accurate ability to quantify total protein in pooled human tear samples, although it also displayed the greatest protein-to-protein variation using individual tear proteins.
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Corneal Swelling with Cosmetic etafilcon A Lenses versus No Lens Wear
Amir M. Moezzi,Jalaiah Varikooty,Marc M. Schulze,William Ngo,Kathrine O. Lorenz,Danielle Boree,Lyndon Jones +6 more
TL;DR: It is confirmed that the addition of polyvinyl pyrrolidone or pigments to etafilcon A to obtain a limbal ring design have no impact on corneal swelling or limbal/bulbar hyperemia during normal open-eye wear.
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Functional Two- and Three-Dimensional Architectures of Immobilized Metal Nanoparticles
TL;DR: This review discusses the methodological advances that enable the immobilization of metal nanoparticles in distinct two- and three-dimensional architectures and discusses their distinctions, properties associated with the assemblies and their applications, and the key challenges and future directions in this growing field.
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21st century citation analysis of the field of contact lenses.
TL;DR: In this article, a 20-year subject-specific contact lens h-index (hCL-20-index) was derived for each author, institution, country and journal to serve as a measure of impact in the field.
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Impact of Lens Care Solutions on Protein Deposition on Soft Contact Lenses.
Negar Babaei Omali,Miriam L. Heynen,Lakshman N. Subbaraman,Dominik Papinski,Carol Lakkis,Sarah L. Smith,Philip B. Morgan,David A. Berntsen,Jason J. Nichols,Lyndon Jones +9 more
TL;DR: The ability of lens care solutions to remove protein from lenses varies depending upon the care solution composition and also the polymeric make-up of the contact lens material.