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Clitoral Piercings
Summary
- Healing Time: 2 - 3 months
- Sit in a bath of warm salty water every day while healing
- Do not wash the piercing with soap
- Do not touch your piercing, or let others touch it while it is healing
- Wait two weeks before having sex
- Practice safe sex at all times
- Never use alcohol swabs, Betadine, hydrogen peroxide, or methylated
spirits to clean your piercing
- Pain, redness and unusual discharge may be due to infection. Consult
your piercer or a physician if you develop any of these symptoms
- Take vitamin C and zinc to maximise your healing
- Wait till your piercing is healed before changing jewelry yourself
Care Routine
- Fill a bath with warm water to a depth of 2 inches.
- Dissolve a heaped tablespoon of sea salt in this water.
- Sit in this bath for 10 minutes, gently swishing the water around
the piercing.
- After this bath, towel yourself dry but do not touch the piercing
itself with the towel.
Let the piercing dry by itself.
Piercing Options and Jewelry Choices
- Glans Clitoris Piercing:
This piercing is only suitable for a small number of persons. There
is considerable risk of permanent damage to the nerves and sensation
of the clitoris. In the worst case scenario all pleasant sensation
may be lost from the clitoris. It should only be considered where
the clitoris itself is large enough to very easily accommodate a 14g
piercing through the glans clitoris.
- Placement:
- This piercing enters the glans on one side and passes directly
through the glans to leave on the opposite side of the glans.
- Suitable Jewelry:
 
- Horizontal Hood Piercing:
This piercing has the advantage of being more visible than the vertical
piercing but is less reliable at providing clitoral stimulation. It
relies on the bead of the captured bead ring resting on the glans
clitoris to provide stimulation.
- Placement:
- This piercing enters the skin to one side of the clitoral
hood, runs across the clitoris beneath the skin of the hood,
and surfaces on the other side of the hood. Usually the ring
is fitted so that the bead rests on the glans
clitoris.
- Suitable Jewelry:
- Captured bead rings of 14gauge
minimum thickness.
- There is tremendous variation in the size of the genitalia
so measurement for each individual is best. 3/8" to 1/2" internal
diameter suits most people.
- Special pliers may be required
to remove the ring or replace the bead.
 
- Triangle Piercing:
This is the least common clitoral piercing as it is only possible
in persons with suitably shaped genitalia and it requires an experienced
piercer. This piercing is reputed to provide very effective clitoral
stimulation during penetrative vaginal intercourse. Only experienced
genital piercers should perform this piercing.
- Placement:
- This piercing enters the skin to one side of the clitoral
hood, runs posterior to the body
of the clitoris and passes anterior
to the urethra, then surfaces
on the other side through the hood.
- Suitable Jewelry:
- Captured bead rings or curved
barbells of 14gauge minimum thickness.
- There is tremendous variation in the size of the genitalia
so measurement for each individual is best. 1/2" to 5/8" internal
diameter suits most people.
- Special pliers may be required
to remove the ring or replace the bead of rings.
 
- Vertical Hood Piercing:
This piercing is the most likely to provide direct stimulation to
the glans clitoris.
- Placement:
- This piercing enters the skin in the midline at the junction
between the glans clitoris and
the hood inferiorly, runs parallel to the clitoris beneath the
skin of the hood, and surfaces in the midline through the skin
of the hood near its apex.
- Suitable Jewelry:
- Curved bar bells of 14gauge
minimum thickness.
- Length of the barbell should be based on measurement of the
clitoral hood. There is tremendous variation in the size of
the genitalia so measurement for each individual is best. 3/8"
is the commonest internal diameter.
- Choose either internally threaded bar bells or be very sure
that no threads are exposed.
 
- Suitable Materials:
- Surgical Stainless Steel, 18 carat gold, titanium,niobium.
- Do NOT use 9 carat gold or silver (which can stain the tissues
permanently) in new piercings.
- NEVER use gold plated jewelry in genital piercings as the acid
environment and constant movement will soon wear away the gold coating.
- Changing Jewelry:
- It is possible to change jewelry during the first 2 months, but
this is best done by a professional piercer.
- Once a piercing is healed you or your partner can change the jewelry
yourselves.
 
Other Issues
- Anatomy
There is tremendous variation in the anatomy
of female genitalia. Consequently each person will only suit some piercings
and others will be impossible, ineffective or impractical. Consult an
experienced piercer when considering these piercings.
- Bacterial Infections
Bacterial infections are less common in
clitoral piercings than most other body piercings. Wash hands before
touching the piercing. Symptoms of infection include increased pain,
increased redness and an increase in the amount and thickness of the
discharge. The infected discharge is usually thick and yellow, green
or grey and may have an unusual odour. Consult with your physician or
piercer and do not remove the jewelry until you seek advice. Removing
the jewelry can allow the piercing to close over the infection and create
an even worse problem: a closed abscess beneath the skin.
- Childbirth
It is prudent to temporarily remove your jewelry before childbirth lest
it provoke tearing.
- Cleaning Agents
Never use alcohol swabs, Betadine,
hydrogen peroxide, methylated
spirit, or tea tree oil to clean your
piercing. These do kill bacteria but they also destroy your healing
flesh. Dead flesh then becomes easily infected.
- Clothing
Wear cotton underwear or no underwear during the healing phase. This
minimises the risk of infection and also thrush.
- Lavender Oil
This essential oil lubricates the piercing
and is reputed to reduce scar tissue and prevent tightening. It must
be used in its dilute form, a drop applied to each side of the piercing
with a cotton bud, the excess removed, and then the jewelry moved back
and forth through the piercing. The correct dilution is 10 drops lavender
oil in 15mls grapeseed or sweet almond oil.
- Sex
There are two issues with sex:
- Mechanical damage to the piercing. Sex can be a very vigorous
activity so start slowly. It is advisable to wait at least two weeks
before penetrative sex.
- The risk of sexually transmitted diseases, particularly high with
an unhealed piercing. Always practice safe
sex.
- Smoking
Smoking slows healing by suppressing your immune system and blood circulation
to the skin.
- Soap
Do NOT clean your piercing with soap. Soap
has no place in the washing of the female genitals. Soap increases the
chance of urinary tract infection in females by sucking bacteria into
the urethra and into the bladder. It
also increases the risk of thrush.
- Swimming
Swimming is not prohibited while your piercing is healing, but you should
only swim for short periods in pools that are thoroughly chlorine- or
ozone-treated. Do not let your skin become wrinkly and soft. If you
swim in the ocean or waterways, do not swim after heavy rain. Storm
water run-off often contains harmful bacteria
and parasites.
- Viral Infections
Viruses such as Hepatitis A, B, and C, and HIV can penetrate a piercing
that has not healed. These viruses may be present in the blood, saliva,
semen, sweat and vaginal secretions of infected persons. Until your
piercing has healed avoid any other person's bodily fluids contacting
your piercing.
- Vitamins
Studies have shown that vitamin C and zinc promote wound healing. Aim
for about 2000-3000 mg vitamin C and 100 mg zinc daily. Note that these
amounts are not available in multivitamin tablets. Ask at your pharmacist
or health-food store for advice on suitable products. If you are taking
any medications, ask your pharmacist to make sure there are no interactions
between them and the vitamin C and zinc you intend to take. For example,
vitamin C can delay the absorption of the contraceptive pill - they
should be taken at different times.
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