What are the side effects of getting your tongue pierced?

Oral Piercing Risks and Complications

  • Make it hard to speak, chew, or swallow.
  • Damage your tongue, gums, or fillings.
  • Make you drool.
  • Make it hard for your dentist to take an X-ray of your teeth.
  • Lead to serious health problems, like gum disease, uncontrolled bleeding, a long-term infection, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C.

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Beside this, how long do you have to wait to give oral after a tongue piercing?

4-6 weeks

People also ask, how long does your tongue hurt after piercing? Pain, as well as a range of other healing symptoms, are perfectly normal after getting a tongue piercing. You can expect the pain to last up to one month, decreasing with time. Tongue swelling usually lasts three to five days but can reduce that by drinking cold liquids.

Likewise, can 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.

What not to do after getting your tongue pierced?

On the flip side, don’t:

  1. use tongue scrapers.
  2. play with your jewelry.
  3. engage in french kissing or oral sex until the piercing has completely healed.
  4. play contact sports with your jewelry in your tongue.
  5. smoke or drink alcohol during the healing process.

Do tongue piercings rot your teeth?

Unfortunately, yes. A tongue piercing can cause damage to teeth. Piercings are usually hard metal, which inside the mouth can cause damage. Biting down onto the piercing or playing with it can result in scratching or chipping teeth, as well as increased tooth sensitivity.

Does tongue ring hole ever close?

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. It should close up, but just like trachs, some close and some don’t. If it doesn’t close after about a year it should be evaluated for a surgical closure if it is causing problems.

Why does your tongue turn white after you get it pierced?

If you (or your teenager) have just had a tongue piercing, you might see a white coating on your tongue. It’s normal bacterial growth that you can reduce with antifungal mouthwash, like Nystatin (like Nystop®).

How can I make my tongue piercing heal faster?

Some other strategies that can speed healing include:

  1. brushing the teeth regularly to keep the mouth clean.
  2. rinsing the piercing after each meal.
  3. not smoking.
  4. minimizing talking during the first few days.
  5. not playing with or touching the piercing.

How do you know if your body is rejecting a tongue piercing?

Symptoms of piercing rejection

  • more of the jewelry becoming visible on the outside of the piercing.
  • the piercing remaining sore, red, irritated, or dry after the first few days.
  • the jewelry becoming visible under the skin.
  • the piercing hole appearing to be getting larger.
  • the jewelry looking like it is hanging differently.

What does a infected tongue piercing look like?

Other symptoms of infection include fever, chills, shaking or red streaks around the piercing wound. The IJAHSP also mentions swollen lymph nodes and unusual discharge as signs of infection. An untreated infected tongue piercing leads to severe consequences, including death.

Why you shouldn’t get your tongue pierced?

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.”

Has anyone died 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.

What percentage of tongue piercings go wrong?

The fact that there’s a 20% chance of infection after receiving an intraoral tongue piercing should be good enough reason to turn people away from the procedure. An infection is the most common occurring ailment as a result of a tongue piercing.

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