There are several types of contact lens options for correcting all of the most common vision problems:
Rigid or "Hard" Lenses: These are made of a type of plastic called PMMA (polymethyl methacrylate) and are very durable, but the least comfortable lens and are therefore not are popular as newer lens styles.
Gas-permeable Lenses: Also known as "RGPs," these are newer rigid or "hard" lenses made of plastics combined with other materials, such as silicone and fluoropolymers, which allow oxygen in the air to pass directly through the lens.
Soft Lenses: These lenses are made of plastic materials that incorporate water. The water makes them soft and flexible, as well as allowing oxygen to reach the cornea.
Disposable Lenses: These are the most common type of lens and are worn for a specific period of time, then thrown out and replaced with fresh lenses.
Extended Wear Lenses: Disposable lenses that can safely be worn for longer periods of times, usually one to several days.
Toric Lenses: Designed specifically to correct vision and astigmatism.
Bifocal Lenses: Provide good vision to people who have problems seeing at near distances.
Multifocal Lenses: Has a range of prescription powers within each lens, correcting distance at near, far and in between distances.
Monovision: wearing a contact lens on one eye to correct your distance vision and a contact lens on your other eye to correct your near vision.
Orthokeratology Lenses: Often referred to as ortho-k, these are special contact lenses worn during sleep to reshape the surface of your eye, so you can see clearly even after you remove the lenses. The effect is temporary, and lenses must be worn each night to maintain the effect.
Colored Lenses: Available with or without a prescription, these lenses give your eyes a subtle or dramatic change. Colored contact lenses come in three options: visibility tints, enhancement tints, and opaque color tints.