Yes, get rid of the junk jewellery you have in the piercing. You are suffering from nickle contact dermatitus, characterized by minor swelling, itching, redness,discharge of clear fluid from the piercing, hyperextension of the piercing opening closest to where the nickle containing material is. This is a normal reaction to the irritation caused by cheap "junk jewellery" purchased in mall shopping outlets. Yes you may have paid good money for the jewellery but remember this rule of thumb," If they don't do professional body piercing at the store, don't buy the jewellery from them." This material is purchased for pennies on a unit wholesale and sold retail as "Surgical Stainless Steel" but is in fact 304 ~ 306 Stainless Steel ( by no means Surgical Grade 316LVM ) under north american standards for testing ASTM. Under many new federal consumer protection laws, sales outlets selling materials advertised as one thing and is actually something else are becoming libal for damages caused by misrepresentation. However these laws may or may not be in effect in your area.
It could be infected. Go see a doctor just in case. You don't want a septic navel.
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.
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
You can cheerleader with a new navel piercing. Be sure to secure the piercing and keep it properly covered to prevent any snagging that may possibly occur.
A navel piercing on the left, no meaning, it's just a piercing.