This is a discussion you need to have with your professional body piercer, they need to look and see if the first piercing is going to be in the way of any future piercings you may want.
Take the jewellery out of the piercing and call it a day. The piercing will continue to migrate and will eventually drop the piercing altogether. Removing the jewellery now will allow your body to maintain the tissue and prevent the formation of scar tissue. After a few weeks you could go and talk to your local professional body piercing about having the piercing redone deeper behind the migrating piercing.
Usually, yes. Some piercers pierce through scar tissue and others dont. For a lobe piercing, most will though.
As long as there is jewellery in the piercing the piercing will not scar, it will form new tissue that makes up the piercing. If the jewellery is removed before the piercing is allowed to heal completely this tissue will join together and form scar tissue.
The body is guarding the tissue while the piercing is healing, this toughening will ease off as the piercing heals. Be sure to stay on your aftercare routine.
Some piercers do and some don't. Some will require that you get a piercing in a larger gauge to get rid of the scar tissue. Just remember that piercing scar tissue is more painful than the initial piercing.
You'll have to get a piercer to check it out. If its sever scarring, they may not be able to insert the dermal. Piercing scare tissue can be pretty painful as well. Just get it checked out!
Well simply put the piercing will close, any time you get a piercing and remove the jewellery a few days after the piercing has been done the body will attempt to repair the damamge by closing the piercing. Jewellery should not be removed for any reason other than to get rid of the piercing, once the jewellery is out and then reinserted at a later date, the fine new tissue that was trying to form now becomes scar tissue instead of the fine fistula that makes up the piercing tissue.
No they generally don't stay in the piercing, that's another poor idea that was stupid from the start. Nose bones cause the piercing to stretch in order to put them in and take them out of the piercing, this stretching on a new piercing causes the piercing to tear and generally damages the new tissue that is trying to form inside the piercing. If your nostril piercing was done with this type of jewellery go back and have a proper nostril screw put in so the tissue can heal without the jewellery causing undue stress on the tissue. The piercer that uses this type of jewellery is a novice (under 3 years) and clearly doesn't understand what he/she is doing nor do they appear to care. It's all about the money. Pity
If its an old piercing its most likely scar tissue, if its a new piercing its most likely getting infected and there is pus in the bump.
No. I had one too when my lip piercing was still healing. It's scar tissue and will go away as the piercing heals.
Probably less than when you got it new!The scar tissue is dead tissue,meaning the nerve endings are no so sensitive as they were when you first did your piercing.
scar tissue from the piercing procedure.