It is a peircing that the body will no accept and is attacking by lazing exponentially, bleeding and overall not healing. It is common associated with "green ears" from and ear piercing. It usually means that you are allergic to the stud that is being used or that it is infected.
No, your eyebrow and ear are two different parts of your body.
A rejected piercing will slowly push it's way out of the skin. An infected piercing will require antibiotics from a doctor.
it can be rejected but it isn't likely to happen. if you clean it regularly it shouldn't be rejected by any means. i don't know that much about silver and rejection. try using steel. :)
If the piercing was done with a piercing gun then that should answer the question.
It will be painful and swollen and moving towards the outer part of your ear, i.e rejecting.
Once the piercing has started to reject it's a done deal, remove the jewellery and allow it to settle down usually a few weeks before having it repierced. It is always better to talk to your piercer about peircings that are rejecting, chances are good it may have something to do with aftercare or jewellery type for the selected piercing.
If, after about two months the piercing is still very painful, red and inflamed, and the bar of the piercing seems closer to the surface it could be being rejected by your body. You should go back and see your piercer immediately and seek their professional advice!
It's pretty likely, if your belly button didnt like it the first time chances are it isn't going to accept it the second. you can try cleaning it more though.
It's not common for a properly done Rook piercing to reject. Due to this piercing being done in deep cartilage, the piercing should not reject (the cartilage won't let it reject). More often that not the problem is the method used to look after the piercing or the solutions used to heal the piercing (generally too much and not properly rinsed out). I would suggest you seek the expert advice of your local professional body piercer. They would need to see what you have going on with the piercing location. If there is enough tissue that isn't damaged they should be able to repierce the area.
Inviting a PROFESSIONAL licensed piercer to your home because any other way is stupid. A belly button piercing is the only common piercing considered a "surface" piercing and is the longest healing and most often rejected piercing there is. Placement, needle size and symmetry are not only important for esthetic but more so for proper healing. Burning a needle and letting your punk friend do it is just asking for an infection, a unattractive scar and lots of regrets when you're older.
I have two rejected naval piercings from an industrial-length bar that i had through the top and bottom of my naval. At first, the scarring was pretty gross and obvious but after a few months it went down significantly. The only scarring leftover now after 6 months can be felt if you pinch the skin where the holes are.
Yes, most likely. Maybe you are piercing too shallow if your body keeps rejecting it. True using a longer bar and pierce deeper.