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Contact lenses > About No Rules Full-Contact Fighting

About No Rules Full-Contact Fighting


 by: Steven Gregoire

Full-contact fighting appeals to participants who want to engage in realistic combat with an opponent. Competitions tend to be more aggressive and may have few rules or almost no rules except the imperative to physically defeat the opponent. In general, competitors have more freedom in full-contact as opposed to medium-contact fighting, though often there are some techniques, such as biting and attacking the eyes or groin, which are forbidden. A point or time system may or may not be used, as this would interfere with realistic combat. The term ?full contact? may also refer to the limitation of protective gear. As an example, kyokushin, a variant of karate, allows participants to wear no more protection than a groin guard while sparring.

Depending on the rules, full-contact fighting may allow participants to use full force to disable or knock out an opponent or achieve submission. At its extreme, the term ?full contact? may mean that all techniques of attack are permitted and that no zones of the body are forbidden from attack. In the early UFC events, judges, time limits, and points were not used. The outcome of a competition was determined by the inability of one of the participants to continue. In Portuguese, vale tudo, which means ?anything goes,? is a form of full-contact fighting. Full-contact rules are used in almost all mixed martial arts competitions held by the UFC, PRIDE, Pancrase, and Shooto. Recently, however, safety rules were written and the use of protective gloves was added. Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and judo, which do not allow striking, are still full-contact fighting in that full force can be used during grappling and submissions. Sambo has full-contact variations of its fighting system.

Some practitioners of full-contact, hand-to-hand combat believe that physically defeating the enemy is the only goal in a competition. Winning a sports match by rules does not appeal to them. They treat competition in the martial arts as a matter of life and death, and they pursue training and the study of fighting techniques without regard to competitive rules or ethical and legal concerns. Even so, with precautions such as a referee and a ring doctor, full-contact matches with basic rules can serve as a useful gauge of a practitioner?s overall fighting ability and encompass striking, grappling, holds, and other broad categories.

About The Author

Steven Gregoire has been training in the martial arts since 1986. Currently

he operates Tigerstrike.com A martial art

equipment and supply store.



What You Should Know Before You Get Contact Lenses

What You Should Know Before You Get Contact Lenses


 by: Martin Smith

There are a number of reasons why so many people around the world suffer from vision deterioration old age, disease of the retina, cornea to name but a few. To help with vision around 1284 in Italy, Salvino D'Armate inventing the first wearable eyeglasses but vision aids where around much longer D?Armate design was very similar to what is still available today.

Who invented Contact Lenses?

Leonardo da Vinci sketched and described several forms of contact lenses in 1508, and in 1632 Rene Descartes suggested the possibility of a corneal contact lens. Adolph Fick first thought of making glass contact lenses in 1888, but it took until 1948 when Kevin Tuohy invented the soft plastic lens for contacts to become a reality.

What If I Want To Use Contacts

If you?ve been wearing spectacles and have never used contact lenses there are a number of things you need to do.

  1. Make...

What You Should Know Before You Get Contact Lenses
Contact lenses > What You Should Know Before You Get Contact Lenses

Unsure About LASIK? Alternatives to LASIK Surgery

Unsure About LASIK? Alternatives to LASIK Surgery

 by: Nicola Kennedy

It?s true that LASIK is one of the most prevalent types of eye surgery. However, a few people are either not comfortable with, or not suitable for LASIK surgery due to inadequate thickness of the corneal tissue. There are several alternatives to LASIK surgery, each possessing certain characteristics that make it more appropriate in a particular situation. The procedures may be different, but the key intent is to correct the vision. The following are a few of the major alternatives to LASIK surgery.

LASEK (Laser-Assisted Sub-Epithelial Keratomiluesis) is a recent addition to the refractive surgery catalog. As noted above, the density of the corneal tissue is inadequate in some patients, and hence, LASIK is not a possible option for them. In such a scenario, procedures like LASEK or PRK (Photo-Refractive Keratectomy) can be viable alternatives. These procedures produce the same...

Unsure About LASIK? Alternatives to LASIK Surgery
Contact lenses > Unsure About LASIK? Alternatives to LASIK Surgery

Bifocal Contact Lenses ? What Are They

Bifocal Contact Lenses ? What Are They

 by: Martin Smith

For year?s people who had both nearsightedness and farsightedness had to suffer with eyeglasses that had thick lenses with a line across them. Not only were the glasses heavy but the frames for glasses in general were to say the least, unattractive. The other problem with the bifocal lenses was adjusting to them. You either have to look up or look down especially going downstairs. People often experience dizziness while adapting to the bifocal lenses.

For years people who needed bifocal lenses had only one choice, eyeglasses. Even when contact lenses came on the market, bifocals still could only be had in eyeglasses. That was then and this is now. Now contact lenses offer as many choices if not more choices than for those who wear eyeglasses. Now to the joy of many, there are bifocal contact lenses available. Bifocal contact lenses are available in soft, rigid, gas permeable materials.

Who...

Bifocal Contact Lenses ? What Are They
Contact lenses > Bifocal Contact Lenses ? What Are They

Bifocal Contact Lens Basics

Bifocal Contact Lens Basics


 by: Jay Moncliff

As we age, many of us notice that we can?t read as well as we used to. We hold things out further and further, literally at arm?s length, until friends and relatives inevitable begin joking about our arm?s getting shorter.

For many of us, presbyopia is a fact of life.
Simply defined, presbyopia is the inability to focus on items in close range.
This condition is caused by the lens in the eye becoming less and less flexible as we age.
Unfortunately, most of us will need corrective lenses and even bifocals at some point as this condition worsens.

Until recently, bifocal wearers had few options when choosing corrective eyeware.
Glasses with bifocal lenses were the most common option.
Luckily, no-line bifocal lenses were developed, and the glasses became somewhat more attractive.
Some struggled with the ?one contact lens? option, called monovision,...

Bifocal Contact Lens Basics
Contact lenses > Bifocal Contact Lens Basics

Contact Lens Options for Your Pediatric Patients

Contact Lens Options for Your Pediatric Patients


 by: Steve Cogger

Pediatric patients are some of the most special patients we see in any practice. When infants present for contact lenses, we all know it is a medical necessity.

The practitioners at my practice believe that contact lenses should not be any more of a burden on the parents than they have to be. And let’s face it, inserting and removing lenses on an infant or a toddler is not an easy task for most.

Regardless, every parent or caregiver is instructed on the insertion and removal of their child’s contact lens. Despite our best efforts, some parents are still hesitant to perform this task at home. In these cases, the child is fit with an extended wear lens made of either soft silicone or an approved gas permeable material. We love watching these kids grow, so we have the parents bring in their child on prescribed schedule to have the lens removed, cleaned, and re-inserted.

Many...

Contact Lens Options for Your Pediatric Patients
Contact lenses > Contact Lens Options for Your Pediatric Patients