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Nose Piercings
Summary
- Healing Time 3 - 12 months, depending on the amount of cartilage pierced
- Don't even think of having nose piercings done with a piercing
gun
- Do not touch your piercing, or let others touch it while it is healing
- Clean your healing piercing once a day only, using antibacterial soap
- Never use alcohol swabs, Betadine, hydrogen peroxide or tea tree oil
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
Daily Care Routine
- Wash your hands with antibacterial soap.
- Wet the piercing with plain water.
- Put a few drops of antibacterial soap on the piercing and work them
into a lather with a cotton bud.
- Try to loosen any crusted discharge and float it off the jewelry and
your skin with the cotton bud.
- Leave the antibacterial soap on the piercing for two minutes while
rotating the jewelry back and forth, allowing the disinfectant to penetrate
the piercing.
- Rinse with water and air dry thoroughly. Do not dry with a towel,
which may carry bacteria.
Piercing Options and Jewelry Choices
- Ala (Side of Nose)
- "Ala" is the medical term for the side of the nose. It
is composed of skin covered cartilage.
- Healing Time 3 - 6 months
- Suitable jewelry:
- Studs
- Rings - 3/8 to 1/2 inch diameter
- 18g or 16g diameter
- Bridge (Top of Nose)
- The bridge is the top part of the nose where it joins the forehead.
- Piercing here travels through the skin but does not traverse cartilage.
- Healing Time 3 - 6 months
- Suitable jewelry:
- Straight barbells
- 16g or 14g thickness
- Septum (Bottom of Nose)
- The septum is the largely hidden midline structure of the nose,
exposed only on the nose's inferior surface.
- It is at the visible inferior part of the septum that piercing
is undertaken.
- Healing Time 2 - 6 months
- Suitable jewelry for new piercings:
- Straight barbells 14 gauge thickness
- Circular barbells 3/8 to 1/2 inch internal diameter, 14 gauge
thickness
- Septum retainers, 14 gauge thickness
Suitable Types:
- Barbells
Either choose internally threaded barbells or, if the bar is externally
threaded, be sure that no threads are exposed.
- Captured bead rings
Rings are much cheaper than barbells. Special pliers may be required
to remove or replace the bead, especially for thicker gauge jewelry.
Avoid sleepers as the sharp edges
at the joint may damage your piercing.
- Studs
Studs come in many different styles:
- Plain or jewelled
- Round, flat, spiked.
There are also various types of internal arrangement to hold the
stud in place:
- Plain tail
- Curly tail
- Beaded
.
Suitable Materials:
Surgical Stainless Steel, 18 carat gold, 14 carat gold, titanium, niobium,
PTFE.
Do not use 9 carat gold, silver (which can stain the tissues permanently),
or gold plated jewelry in new
piercings. In a healing piercing the gold plating will wear off the
jewelry before the piercing is healed. This is not such a problem
in healed piercings.
Changing Jewelry:
You may damage your piercing by changing jewelry during the healing
period. This is best done by a professional piercer. Once a piercing
is healed you can change the jewelry yourself.
Other Issues
- Bacterial Infections
Symptoms 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 may prevent pus draining
and cause an abscess to form.
- Cleaning Agents
Never use alcohol swabs, Betadine, chlorhexidine,
hydrogen peroxide, methylated spirit, or tea tree oil to clean your
piercing. These do kill bacteria but they also destroy your healing
flesh. The killed flesh then becomes easily infected.
- Keloids
Helix piercings are prone to keloid formation,and
much more so when a piercing gun is used.
- 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 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.
- Sleeping
Consider wearing a small patch of hypoallergenic tape over alar piercings
at night for the first week or two. They can easily become dislodged
during sleep.
- Smoking
- Smoking slows healing by suppressing your immune system and blood
circulation to the skin.
- Smoking will increase the healing time of cartilage piercings
by months.
- If you cannot stop smoking then you should reconsider having any
piercings.
- 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. If you swim in the ocean or waterways, do not swim after
heavy rain since storm water run-off often contains 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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