Body Piercing - aftercare
Handling your piercing at the beginning is the same as taking care of a little wound. It's important to take good care of you piercing, especially when the fistula hasn't formed yet. Don't wear tight or filthy clothing on your new piercing.
Your hands should be disinfected before touching the piercing, after all, hands carry a lot of bacteria.
Don'ts
- Don't take the jewelry out in the healing period. The wound will heal better and won't close as fast when you remove the jewelry for a short while.
- Don't apply any ointments on the piercing. It's best to keep the piercing as dry as possible. Ointments keep the oxygen out and will slow down the healing.
- Avoid make-up, shaving cream, strong soap or perfumed stuff around your piercing.
- Don't hang charms from your jewelry until the wound is fully healed.
- Avoid sleeping on the piercing while healing.
- Don't over clean. Cleaning the piercing wound more than twice a day is not advisable, it will slow down the healing.
- Don't use band-aids on your piercing. There will not be enough air circulation and the adhesive can cause irritation.
- Avoid swimming pools, jacuzzis (the warm air above the water surface harbors a lot of bacteria), lakes,... If there is sea life, motor oil or children in the water, then it is not clean enough! If you are going in water, and you doubt if the water is clean enough, then you can put a non water-permeable band-aid that seals off the piercing before going in the water. It will prevent the dirty water from getting inside the wound. Cleaning the wound afterwards will not be effective in preventing any infection!
- Avoid oral contact or body fluids that are not your own! Your own body fluids like sweat are not harmful for your piercing, but you do have to clean it.
Do's
- Wash your hands prior to any contact near the healing piercing!
- Wear clean and breathable fabrics around the area of your new piercing. Don't wear tight clothing around the piercing.
- Your bedding should be clean at all time.
- Leave the starter jewelry in for at least the minimum healing time.
- A healthy lifestyle will help your piercing heal faster. Staying away from drugs and alcohol, eating nutritious foods and avoiding stress will show their benefits.
- Take a shower instead of a bath. A bath tub tends to contain lots of bacteria. If you insist on bathing, clean the tub with a bleaching product each time before bathing, and rinse it with water. When you get out of the bath, rinse your piercing with water.
Cleaning solution
Mild seawater soaks are recommended (daily), they give the best results for accelerating your healing and increasing your comfort.
dissolve 1/4 teaspoon of sea salt in a cup (8 oz.) of warm water. Make sure the cup is clean. Don't make the solution any stronger because too much salt can get the piercing to burn. Invert the cup over the area and soak directly for a few minutes. You can also use a cotton ball soaked in the salt water in stead of the direct soaking when the piercing is on a difficult place.
Cleaning instructions
Clean your piercing twice a day during the initial healing period. Don't clean it too much, it will cause irritation. Stay away from your piercing the rest of the day.
Before the cleaning, wash your hands with soap (recommended is that you take one with an antibacterial working) and hot water.
First you have to rinse the area of the piercing with warm water to make sure the crusts that have formed are removed. Otherwise they can get into the piercing and the piercing can get infected.
Cleanse the area arond the piercing and the jewelry with the cleaning solution. Carefully move the piercing jewelry up and down to get the cleaning solution into the piercing. Let the solution do it's work for a minute.
You may bathe normally, just don't get any other products then the cleaning solution into your piercing on purpose.
Rinse the piercing with running water. All of the cleaning solution must be removed. Pull the piercing jewelry back and forth real gently while rinsing so that the solution from inside the piercing is also removed.
Pat the area dry with tissues or gauze. Avoid cloth towels, they can be a source of bacteria.
What's normal
Bleeding, bruising and swelling are normal, they don't point to an infection.
Tenderness, discomfort are not abnormal in the first several weeks. You can feel burning, stinging or aching on the first days on and off. Itching is also very common.
The secretion of a whitish fluid forms crusts at the openings of the piercing. This is not pus. It contains blood plasma, lymph and dead cells. It's completely normal and indicates the healing process.
Keep cleaning.
If you notice anything abnormal, or the piercing gets badly infected, contact the piercer or a doctor.
If your piercing secretes pus, you should go see a doctor for an antibiotic treatment. The piercing should be left in at all times to ensure the drainage of pus. If the jewelry is removed, the piercing can close and you can get an abscess... Leave your jewelry in!!!
Healing Time
Ear lobe: 6-8 weeks
Ear cartilage: 4 months - 1 year
Eyebrow: 6-8 weeks
Nostril: 2-4 months
Nasal septum: 6-8 months
Lip: 2-3 months
Tongue: 4 weeks
Nipple: 3-6 months
Belly Button: 4 months - 1 year
Male genitalia: 4 weeks - 6 months
Female genitalia: 4-10 weeks
-Body Piercing-

3 Comments:
Not bad, good Blog! But you should be careful though, too many people love this info ;-)
Learn to play Guitar for Free
If you don't mind I would like to add a few things here.
About Don'ts
The reason you should not remove and re-insert your jewelry during the healing period is because it is not sanitary. You will get an infection by doing this. You can, however, have a qualified piercer do so with sterilized jewelry in the proper environment. Remember most parlours are not the proper environment.
I must say I agree with most of what I see here.
The main thing I don't agree with is the aftercare and cleaning instructions.
Sea salt will dry your skin and should not be applied to the piercing. A sea salt soak can be good for a piercing that is irritated and needs to be flushed out. Sea salt can cause cracks in the skin thus allowing bacteria to enter. Skin infections are commonly started by small cracks in the skin. Sea salt soaks are not advised and can cause infections on their own. Dr Piercing's aftercare is the best product to use for sanitation and healing. It has a bacteria and germ killer in it and has aloe and vitamin b5 to promote healing. Cotton balls near open wounds are never a good idea.
The quality of the jewelry is essential. Most parlours use industrial quality steel barbells. Yes I said Industrial quality. Oh what does that mean. It means the metal in the jewelry is for industrial use and not for implant. It is hard enough to get the human body to accept medical implant grade steel. Never use an externally threaded barbell. All externally threaded barbells are made of "junk metal". I always go to this place in Huntington Beach California called Tommy T's Body Piercing. You should check them out.
http://www.tommytbodypiercing.com/
17 piercings and never a problem, and they explain everything to you.
I can see that the administrator of this blog has some good knowledge about body piercing. I do want to commend her on that.
Happy piercings
I found your info on taking care of body piercings very helpful, but i was wondering about antibiotics and body piercings cause im on minocycline for acne and ive noticed that my eyebrow piercing is healing very fast, its been about a week and there is no redness, swelling, crusties around the piercing or anything else, im wondering if this is normal or if it could have something to do with the antibiotics and if its a bad thing to get a piercing done when on this type of antibiotic? should i talk to a doctor or the piercer?
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