Nape piercing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nape piercing | |
Location | Nape of the neck |
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Jewelry | Barbell, surface bar |
Healing | Any where between a couple of months - 3 years ! |
A nape piercing is a piercing through the surface of the nape (back part) of the neck. Nape piercings are a type of surface piercing. They carry a high rate of rejection and migration,[1] if they are properly measured and placed. They may reject if they are not pierced properly, as they are in a part of the body that moves constantly and are easy to irritate, catching on clothing or other objects.
[edit] Jewelry
Being surface piercings, nape piercings require special jewelry to minimize the risk of piercing migration and rejection. Both surface bars and barbells with bars made from flexible material, such as tygon or teflon, are commonly used as both initial and long term jewelry in nape piercings. More appropriate is titanium, which due to lack of nickel is less prone to irritation of surrounding skin. A quality piercing is done in two steps with different bars, one with long poles (used at time of piercing) to allow for initial swelling, and the second bar (short poles with beads a few mm from skin) to be inserted months later once most (if not all) healing has taken place. Other similar jewelry include specially made and bent barbells, which are made either by the piercer or ordered from a dealer.
[edit] History and culture
Nape piercings, like most surface piercings, are of completely contemporary origin. Numerous urban legends and popular culture myths associate nape piercings with a potential for spinal or nerve damage, due to their location. Nape piercings do not interact with nerve tissue more or less than any other surface piercing, and there is no risk of nerve damage associated with nape piercings.
[edit] References
- ^ The Point #33 A Statistical Look at Surface Bars
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