Contact Lens Institute of Nevada focuses on specialty contact lenses for complex patients, including gas permeable, scleral, scleral shells, orthokeratology, and related eye health topics. Content appears to be tutorial- and information-style videos addressing diagnosis, treatment options, eye health, and lens types, with an average of about 341 views per video and an active publishing pattern of roughly 0.2 uploads per week since joining on Apr 15, 2020.
Similar Channels
We found 40 YouTube channels similar to Contact Lens Institute of Nevada
Both channels target eye care topics with strong overlap on scleral lenses, keratoconus signs, and gas permeable lenses (high search dominance at 100% and 89% match; content similarity 81%), indicating similar audience interests and topics.
Similar focus on contact lens and keratoconus topics (queries include scleral lenses benefits, keratoconus signs, gas permeable lenses) with solid search overlap (59%) and high content similarity (83%), suggesting a closely related informational style.
Shares emphasis on scleral lenses and gas permeable lenses (queries: scleral lenses benefits, gas permeable lenses) with moderate search overlap (36%) but high content similarity (84%), indicating similar educational content delivered in a distinct presenter style.
Targets keratoconus-related topics and orthokeratology lenses (queries: keratoconus signs, orthokeratology) with modest search overlap (21%) but high content similarity (85%), implying a shared audience interested in keratoconus topics but different niche focus.
Covers keratoconus diagnosis and treatment options (queries: keratoconus signs, treatment options) aligning with Contact Lens Institute of Nevada’s keratoconus content, with low search overlap (20%) but high content similarity (85%), indicating similar educational intent in a different presentation style.
Focuses on keratoconus prevalence, pediatric keratoconus, and risk factors, matching the same ocular disease topics even though search overlap is low (13%), content alignment remains high (88%), signaling a shared informational niche.
Content Landscape
Top competitors by match strength are Doctor Eye Health (89% match) and Insight Vision Center Optometry (74% match). They share overlapping queries such as scleral lenses benefits and keratoconus diagnosis signs, which align with the channel’s focus on scleral and keratoconus-related content. Dr. EyeGuy (64% match) also overlaps on scleral lenses and gas permeable lenses, indicating similar topic areas. Woo University (59% match) and Doctor Ilan Cohen (59% match) reinforce the keratoconus and orthokeratology/search terms space. Contact Lens Institute of Nevada has 2.1K subscribers, while competitors range from 3.3K (Woo University) to 1.4M (Doctor Eye Health), showing a substantial size gap between the channel and the largest competitor. Shared queries include scleral lenses benefits, keratoconus diagnosis signs, gas permeable lenses, keratoconus treatment options, and LASIK aftercare keratoconus.
Which YouTube channels are most similar to Contact Lens Institute of Nevada?
Doctor Eye Health — 89% match, 1.4M subscribers; Insight Vision Center Optometry — 74% match, 27.1K subscribers; Dr. EyeGuy — 64% match, 258K subscribers. These channels share a focus on eye care and vision health, including eye conditions and corrective lenses, similar to Contact Lens Institute of Nevada.
What type of content does Contact Lens Institute of Nevada make?
The channel produces content about contact lenses and vision correction, with video titles such as benefits of scleral lenses, eye exercises, and keratoconus signs and diagnosis. Uploads occur at an average rate of about 0.2 per week, and videos average roughly 341 views.
How do we determine which channels are similar to Contact Lens Institute of Nevada?
We analyze Contact Lens Institute of Nevada's recent videos, generate topic-relevant search queries, check YouTube search results, and compare the meaning of each channel's content to measure similarity. The result is a ranked list sorted by SERP overlap, semantic similarity, and search appearances.