Rochester, Minnesota - Looking good on Halloween often comes at a price, but that price should be in dollars and cents - not compromising your health. Unfortunately, misuse of decorative contact lenses and supplementing costumes with tinted eyewear may put your well-being at risk.

Decorative contacts are lenses that change the appearance of your eyes without correcting vision. They can modify eye color, include your favorite team’s logo or create a scary, wild eye appearance for a creature you’re embodying on Halloween. They’re also known as cosmetic or fashion lenses and are promoted like an accessory, such as jewelry, scarves or no-correction glasses, in non-eye-care stores. However, decorative lenses are not as harmless as they seem.

“Contact lenses are medical devices that need proper fitting and should be purchased from a store that requires a prescription,” says Bob Friese, O.D., Optometry, Mayo Clinic Health System in Fairmont. “Buying them elsewhere and not having a proper fitting can lead to significant health risks. The risks to your eyes include corneal abrasions, infections, allergic reactions, decreased vision and blindness.”

Dr. Friese explains that if your eyes become red, sore, painful, light-sensitive or your vision is altered, you should seek prompt treatment from an eye care provider. Left untreated, these issues can lead to blindness.

“The more common sense approach is to see an eye care provider for an exam, lenses fitting and prescription when considering decorative lenses,” adds Dr. Friese.

Additionally, wearing tinted glasses, goggles and masks while walking the streets on Halloween — especially at night — can inhibit your vision, limiting your ability to see vehicles, fall hazards and other people. Dr. Friese recommends reserving any eyesight-impeding props for well-lit indoor functions or avoiding them altogether.

“Enjoy the fun of decorative contacts and Halloween costumes, but do so in a manner that doesn’t put you in danger,” says Dr. Friese.

Learn more about the dangers of decorative contact lenses at http://www.fda.gov.