What age should you take out your tongue piercing?

It’s not safe to change your jewelry any time before at least six weeks have progressed. Listen to your body, and don’t rush it. It’s tempting to want to switch out that boring stud with a cool barbell. If you remove your tongue piercing too soon, it can close up in a matter of minutes.

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Considering this, why you shouldn’t get a tongue piercing?

The American Dental Association recommends against tongue piercing. It shouldn’t come as a surprise, but the ADA recommends against tongue piercing because of risks including “swelling, bleeding, infection, chipped or damaged teeth, gingivial recession, lacerations/scarring, hypersalivation, etc.”

Secondly, can you die from a tongue piercing? Doctors are warning that tongue piercings could lead to fatal infections, after a 22-year-old Israeli man died in hospital weeks after getting his tongue pierced. Although this is a rare case, oral physicians say there is always a risk of infection when surgery is performed in the mouth.

Likewise, people ask, will my tongue piercing close up after 10 years?

About tongue piercings, it is true that tongue piercings do not completely close up if they have completely healed before the tongue stud is removed. … If the tongue piercing is removed for even one night, it will partially close up as it is a muscle, which is very unlike ear piercings.

Can a tongue piercing paralyze you?

Nerve Injury

The tongue is supplied by the hypoglossal nerve and the lingual branch of the trigeminal nerve. These nerves can be damaged during piercing and permanent paralysis of the tongue can occur.

How painful is tongue piercing?

How much does the tongue piercing hurt? The tongue may seem like it would be sensitive, but most report relatively low piercing pain. With an experienced piercer, you will feel a pinch, but they’ll conduct the procedure quickly, so it will be fast. The real pain comes in the days immediately afterward.

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