You can only use a New needle for piercing. and they are sterilized in a lab.
If the needle isn't sterile and you are the only one to use it, you could get an infection. If the needle isn't sterile and other people have used it, you could get an infection or diseases as bad as AIDS
needle
I'm not really sure what you mean by sterile solution because it could be administered different ways, but generally unless it is from an unopened container that is sterile, and is administered with a newly opened syringe and needle, than it is not.
No..as long as it is only your own blood on the needle (it was a sterile needle before you used it) and you were the one getting stuck. You can only get hep C if someone else who has hep c used the needle before you did.
You can't. You get it from the needle not the tatoo.
aids, hiv, blood poisoning, hepititis? um, anything the needle is contaminatedd with? if it isn't sterile that is.
yes, I believe so! I suggest you should pop it with a sterile needle.
Bleaching a used needle is not recommended as it may not effectively sterilize the needle. It is best to properly dispose of used needles in a Sharps container and use new, sterile needles for each injection to prevent the risk of infections or other complications.
Just how it sounds. It's when something, like a needle/shot for example, goes through your skin to reach your "insides" when you take a shot, the tiny hole it leaves from the needle is a skin puncture because something went through that hole to get inside your body.
The recommended treatment would be to go to a gynecologist and have them take it out under local anesthesia. You could pop one with a sterile needle at home, but that does not guarantee that you won't get an infection or that the cyst won't return.
The equipment needed for thoracentesis includes a small-bore needle, a syringe, an antiseptic solution, local anesthetic, sterile drapes, sterile gloves, a specimen container, and equipment for monitoring the patient's vital signs. A chest X-ray machine should also be readily available to confirm proper needle placement during the procedure.
If you are thinking of doing this yourself DON'T! See your doctor and indeed they will use a needle to 'aspirate' (suck up the excessive water.) You should NEVER play around with this or you could get infection.