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					| Body Piercing: Safe Jewelry Choices
		
			| Body Piercing: Safe Jewelry ChoicesSkip to the navigationTopic OverviewAppropriate jewelry for body piercing sitesIs removable. If you have your mouth pierced and
		  you use oral jewelry, make sure it can be removed. For example, you should be
		  able to unscrew the ball on one end of a barbell-shaped device to make the
		  device easy to insert and take out.Allows for full cleaning of the
		  piercing site. Ear studs or other jewelry designed for the ears are not
		  appropriate for other body sites. Other body sites are hard to clean or may easily tear or snag if you use  jewelry designed for the ear in them.Is smoothly polished, free of nicks, scratches, or jagged
		  surfaces that might damage the skin. The back of an earring can pinch and
		  damage tissue when used in places other than the earlobe. Backs of earrings are
		  not smooth enough to prevent skin and tissue damage.Is the right
		  thickness for the body site being pierced. 
		  Jewelry that is too thin can act like a
				"cheese cutter" and tear right through the skin. The thickness of the average
				ear stud is 16- to 20-gauge, which is too small for most other body piercing
				sites.Jewelry that is too thick for the site can cause an
				abscess, a cyst, or scar tissue
				formation.Jewelry that is too large can easily catch on
				clothing.Jewelry that is too small can be "sucked" into the body
				tissues.
Is made from metals that do not cause allergic
		  reactions. Only use nonallergenic jewelry. Surgical stainless steel, gold,
		  platinum, niobium, and titanium are the only types of jewelry you should use in a new
		  piercing. Do not use nickel or brass-plated jewelry.Is sterilized
		  before it is put into the piercing site. Choose jewelry that has not been used
		  or worn or that has been sterilized in an autoclave.
CreditsByHealthwise StaffPrimary Medical ReviewerWilliam H. Blahd, Jr., MD, FACEP - Emergency Medicine
 Specialist Medical ReviewerH. Michael O'Connor, MD - Emergency Medicine
 Martin J. Gabica, MD - Family Medicine
Current as ofMarch 20, 2017Current as of:
                March 20, 2017 Last modified on: 8 September 2017  |  |  |  |  |  |