Okay so if you have your cartilage pierced, some things could be it's infected because when you slept, your ear rubbed against whatever you were sleeping on and that could be it or you could have not cleaned it well with whatever you chose or whatever your piercer told you to clean it with. Another could be that the piercer didn't sterilize the needle or gun he/she pierced it with. If it's not pierced then you could have bumped it against something and now its sore.
A bit, yes.
yes it hurt a bit after 2 or 3 hours
The symptom of a swollen outer ear can be perichondritis, an ear cartilage infection caused by bacteria. Another symptom is pain. A cause for this condition can be injury of ear cartilage due to factors like cartilage piercing or ear surgery.
yes because that is the hard part of the ear and besides you are not suppose to have tattoos anyway.
to keep that part of the body soft, if your ear were not made of cartilage then sports could not be played, YOUR EAR WOULD BE BROKEN OFF!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Well it all depends on how you handle pain. I handle pain good so mine didn't hurt. When my Helix is healed i am getting my second ear lobe holes and then after that i am getting my industrial piercing with is a bar across your ear. (cartilage piercing). If it hurts to get your helix done don't get another cartilage piercing don't get an industrial if you ever want it cause it goes through your ear twice so its twice the pain.
Ear cartilage piercing, yes and................
Cause they're freaking awesome !
Dont! if you go on a plane with an ear infection it could cause you to be deaf or it could really really hurt! One more time dont go on an airplane with an ear infection!
You have to be 14 to get your helix pierced because it is more dangerous than regular ear piercings. It could get infected and in some rare instances the sudden impact of the stud could cause the cartilage in your ear to shatter or collapse.
Piercing cartilage with a piercing guns is the number one cause, two would be a secondary infection.
elastic cartilage supports the external ear