Use antibacterial soap like Dial use sea salt to make it less swollen . Clean it around twice a day . The sea salt won't clean it but it helps make it less swollen .
Use either the natural sea salt=water or an alcohol free mouthwash for rinsing your mouth. Dial can make your skin really dry so only use it 1-2 times a week. The natural sea salt is fine for everyday.
Alcohol should not be used on any piercing. Soaking your piercing in sea salt is best. you can also use non scented antibacterial soap to clean your piercing
No
You never use any type of alcohol to clean any piercing. Use a mixture of natural sea salt and warm water. Alcohol kills whats helping your piercing heal.
Yes
It is not appropriate to use Hibiclens antiseptic to clean your nose piercing because it does not favor quick healing; instead, use sea salt soaks.
No professional body piercer is going to let you use alcohol to clean your piercing, it's too hard on the piercing and kills the new tissue trying to form. Follow the written aftercare instructions your professional body piercer provided you with during your piercing.
you shouldn't use alcohol to clean any piercings. You can use alcohol to disinfect your jewelry but not the piercing itself. It dries it out.
Like with any piercing, scarring is definitely a possibility. But there are types of medicine you can buy to reduce or eliminate any scars you may get after removing the piercing permanently.
Most piercing studios charge between $50 and $75 for dimple piercings to your cheeks.
If the piercing is recent, very carefully, once it is healed, you can clean it as usual.
Yes. Natural sea salt. Table salt can have things added to it and that can be bad for the piercing. Its just the safest bet :)
Well when the piercing is red, swollen, discharging green puss, painful and warm to the touch, guess what, "it's infected". See your doctor. If your piercings are red, discharging clear fluid, the piercing appears to be enlarged* (*the jewellery looks like it's floating in space in the piercing), then this is s sign of an allergic reaction, generally due to either the material the piercing was done with or the solution you are using to clean the piercing. Cease using whatever you are using to clean the piercing and see your doctor. If the piercing appears to be normal skin tone and it's discharging clear fluid with no pain or swelling, guess what, your saliva ducts in your cheeks have been cut by the piercing and you need to see a doctor to have the piercing cauterized closed.