Generally rejection starts when you notice the tissue between the entry and exit points going from a normal flesh tone to a more pinkish tone. This can be due to jewellery that is ill fitting (generally too large or long for the piercing) causing stress on the actual tissue retaining the piercing. If you notice this tonal change in the skin, that's the time you should ask yourself if you want to keep the piercing or not. If you opt to loose the piercing or have it redone then remove the jewellery from the piercing and see your local professional body piercer for a second opinion. Sometimes changing the jewellery can revert a migration by minimizing the irritation longer or over sized jewellery can cause.
Some of the signs nclude: -Red patch/rash -Soreness -pus/discharge -The Bar protruding -The hole getting bigger If you thing your piercing is rejeecting, go straight to your piercer!!
If your jewellery is starting to look too long for the piercing the piercing is migrating and will open up at some point and drop the jewellery out.
As you would without a navel piercing, just be sure the navel piercing is the last thing you clean before you exit the bath.
Your question "Can navel piercing migration be down to growth" makes no sense.
She can still keep her navel piercing in.
If it hangs or dangles chances are good that it will retain a piercing. Placing the navel piercing off to the side will be problematic for aftercare and irritation during the healing process. If you haven't had a navel piercing before then stay with something that is simpler to care for and will give a result a navel piercing is supposed to give.
Navel piercing could cost anywhere between Rs 350 and 500 with navel jewelery done by experienced piercer.
If you want to wear a regular navel ring in your inverse piercing, turn the navel ring upside-down, so that the larger gem is in the navel, and the smaller gem is below.
If your jewellery is starting to look too long then your piercing is shallow and starting to migrate and will at some point in time fall out of the piercing.
it is a plastic piece you put in to retain your navel piercing
Navel
There is no direct evidence of historical navel piercing, although there is a great deal of historical evidence regarding the decoration of the navel, both for ritual and aesthetic purposes.
it is a plastic piece you put in to retain your navel piercing