- Written ByDan Hunteron July 15, 2018
Last Updated: October 13, 2023
- Medizinisch überprüft von Dr. Jennifer T. Haley, M.D., FAAD.
The biggest part of cartilage piercing care is keeping your piercing clean. Maintaining a proper aftercare routine is essential during the healing process, but it’s also good to take care of your cartilage piercing for the long-term because an infection can occur anytime, even after a piercing is healed.
Fortunately, cartilage piercing care is easy, and this guide gives you all the information you need for a trouble-free, beautiful piercing.
How Long Does A Cartilage Piercing Take To Heal?
Cartilage piercings normally take anywhere from 4 to 12 months to completely heal. As with all piercings, they heal from the outside in. This means they might appear healed from the outside before the healing process has completely finished throughout the area.
If you tend to heal slowly when you get a wound, treat your cartilage piercing like it isn’t fully healed for at least a year.
What To Do On The Day You Get Your Cartilage Piercing
In general, it’s what you do after your piercing that determines how well it heals. There are, however, a few things you can do before you get pierced that will help speed up the healing process.
Eat before you go
Eating a snack or light meal before getting a new piercing not only helps you deal with the pain better, it also prepares your body to start healing.
Proper nutrition allows your body tonourish the wound for optimal healing. This is especially important forcartilage, which receives less blood flow than other body parts. Foods rich in Vitamin C are especially important.
Check if someone is available to come with you
This isn’t a necessity, but if you’re feeling anxious, then bringing a friend along can help you deal better with the pain of getting pierced.
Have ibuprofen ready
You should not take any kind of oral pain medicine before a cartilage piercing because ibuprofen (Motrin, Advil), aspirin, and naproxen all causeblood thinning, which can cause you to bleed more. However, you can have one of these anti-inflammatory pain medicines ready to take afterward. They’ll help reduce swelling. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) can be taken before the piercing as it will not cause blood thinning.
Stay hydrated and avoid alcohol
Drinking enough water will help to regulate your blood pressure so that you’re less likely to pass out during the piercing process. It also helps with circulation and the healing process. Drinking alcohol may dehydrate you, increase healing time, and it can also cause you to bleed more while getting pierced.
Know your ear
Before you head to the body piercing parlor, know exactly which part of your cartilage you want to have pierced, and on which side. You don’t want to make the piercer wait while you think about it, and you don’t want to make a quick decision that you may regret later.
Also, make sure you’re aware thatcartilage piercing costscan vary widely depending on which part of the cartilage is being pierced.
Also consider the aftercare of your piercing. You may not want to get pierced on the side that you sleep on or in a place that is likely to get bumped or caught on something, either at work or recreationally.
Pay attention to aftercare instructions
After you get your cartilage pierced, the piercer will give you instructions for taking care of your new piercing. It should be something like this:
- Keep your hands off the piercing
- Always wash your hands before handling the jewelry or cleaning
- Don’t sleep on your piercing
- Clean the piercing daily with saline (salt water)
Admire your new piercing
Go ahead and look in a mirror to see how worth it your cartilage piercing is. It may look a bit red and irritated now, but once it’s healed you’ll likely be quite happy you went through the experience.
What To Do During The Rest Of The Aftercare Phase
Aftercare is one of the most important parts of getting a cartilage piercing. It is, in fact, the difference between a healthy piercing that heals well and looks great, and one that ends upinfectedand damaged. The good news is it’s straightforward.
1. Soak the piercing with salt water (or a pre-madesaline solutionfor piercings) once or twice every day.
2. Mist the piercing with saline spray occasionally throughout the day.
3. Wash the jewelry with soap and water each day, rinsing thoroughly, but don’t get the soap into the piercing itself.
You should follow these aftercare procedures for at least three months, or until you are confident that your cartilage piercing is fully healed.
You should note that lumps and bumps are relatively common around cartilage piercings, and they may not always be caused by infection. These bumps are commonly known askeloids or hypertrophic scars, and are mainly caused by an overabundance of scar tissue/collagen.
What Not To Do While Your Cartilage Piercing Is Healing
Of course, in addition to knowing what you should do to keep your piercing clean and healing well, there are a few things to avoid.
Don’t go swimming right away
You should wait until your cartilage piercing is no longer an open wound before getting into any body of water (other than a shower).
For cartilage piercings, it’s a good idea to wait about a month before swimming with your piercing, in order to prevent infections from bacteria in the water. If your piercing is bleeding, swollen, or leaking pus, don’t go swimming until symptoms clear up.
Don’t touch the jewelry
It used to be advised by some piercers to rotate or twist earrings to help the piercing heal correctly. This is no longer advised. You should keep your hands off your earrings to prevent infection from bacteria, and that also means no twisting or moving the earring. And moving the jewelry actually is more likely to damage your cartilage piercing and prevent it from healing well.
Don’t sleep on the piercing
Sleeping on your piercing means it is pressed up against your pillow or bed sheets, or against your head. This exposes your piercing to bacteria and sweat, and leads to irritation. Laying on the piercing will make it feel sore for longer. Instead, let your piercing breathe and get good blood circulation by not pressing it against anything while you sleep.
Don’t pick at any formed crust
Your cartilage piercings will likely leak some clear-to-yellowish fluid that dries as a crust around the site. The fluid is a normal part of the healing process and does not mean you have an infection. Do not try to pick the crust off with your fingers or fingernails. Instead, wipe it off with a cotton swab dipped in saline.
How To Clean A Cartilage Piercing
You know that you should clean your cartilage piercing with saline. But how exactly do you do that? It’s simple. And you have three options. The first way is to use a pre-made saline solution for piercings. The second is to make your own saline solution. The third is to buy specially designed piercing aftercare healing products.
Ganz genau! Die Wahl eines veganen und alkoholfreien Nachsorgeprodukts ist eine ausgezeichnete Entscheidung für die Pflege deines Piercings. Diese Art von Produkten ist oft sanfter zur Haut und minimiert das Risiko von Reizungen oder allergischen Reaktionen. Es ist entscheidend, während des Heilungsprozesses sorgfältig auf die Pflege deines Piercings zu achten, um Infektionen und andere Komplikationen zu verhindern. Wenn du weitere Fragen zur Pflege deines Piercings hast oder Tipps benötigst, stehe ich gerne zur Verfügung!
Use saline
First, wash your hands before you clean your piercing. Starting with clean hands prevents you from spreading bacteria to the site.
Next, pour the saline into a clean shallow glass that is just large enough to submerge the pierced part of your ear into. Keep the piercing submerged for about 5 minutes.
Use a clean cloth, gauze, or a cotton swab dipped in saline to remove any crust that loosened around the piercing while soaking. Finally, rinse the piercing with clean water and dry it off.
How to make your own saline
Saline is just a solution of salt and water. However, you should not use table salt (iodized salt) for cleaning piercings.
Take one-fourth of a teaspoon of kosher salt or sea salt and stir it to 1 cup of warm distilled water. You can buy distilled water at most grocery stores. The distilling process removes impurities and minerals from the water. The water doesn’t need to be too hot, just hot enough for the salt to dissolve.
When Can I Stop Cleaning My Cartilage Piercing?
There’s no exact time that everyone should stop cleaning their cartilage piercing because each individual heals at a different rate.
What stays the same for everyone is that the inside of the piercing is not fully healed at the same time as the flesh on the outside of a cartilage piercing. That means you need to continue cleaning your cartilage piercing for at least a month after it appears fully healed.
Signs that the piercing is fully healed include the site of the piercing being normal colored and not red, swollen, or tender; no clear or yellowish fluid draining; andno painwhen the area is touched.
The earliest a cartilage piercing heals for most people is 3 months. That being said, it’s not a bad idea to keep cleaning the ear with saline for up to a year.
Wichtige Pflegeschritte nach dem Ohrpiercen, die Du unbedingt beachten solltest
Einige unserer anderen super-hilfreichen Ratgeber:
- Heilungszeiten für Ohrpiercings
- Wie man ein neues Ohrpiercing pflegt
- Wie man eine Ohrpiercing-Infektion behandelt
- Wie lange dauert es, bis ein Ohrpiercing verheilt ist?
Summary
It’s really that easy. Keep hands and dirt off your piercing, and rinse it with salt water as needed. There’s no need for harsh cleaners like alcohol or peroxide, which can dry out the surrounding skin. If you follow the simple steps above, you should have a beautiful, perfect-looking cartilage piercing for years to come.
Related Ear Piercing Articles
Ear Piercing Issues / Ear Piercings
Inner Ear Piercings: Guide and Images
Ear Piercing Types / Ear Piercings
Unveiling the Mystery: What Gauge is a Conch Piercing?
Ear Piercing Types / Ear Piercings / General Piercing Questions / Piercings
How To Clean An Industrial Piercing
Ear Piercing Healing / Ear Piercings
Double Cartilage Piercings: Guide and Images
Ear Piercing Types / Ear Piercings
Tragus Piercing Pain: How Much Do They Hurt?
Ear Piercing Pain / Ear Piercings