Dermal piercings are single point piercings and are not at all like normal piercings that have an entry and exit point so more care needs to be used in looking after them in the early healing stages. The dermal will discharge just like a normal piercing this needs to be rinsed away daily, subjecting the dermal to tanning beds, tanning oils and even spray tanner is not a good idea for the first few weeks post piercing.
The coatings on the skin (spray tanner and tanning oils) should never be allowed to get into the piercing, it's a puncture wound, and will react negatively to these solutions and oils. Ultra violet light doesn't help the healing process and can create a hot spot at the piercing sight damaging the newly pierced tissue. It can take up to three months for the body to heal a dermal anchor, so covering it with a round band-aid while using a tanning booth or bed is a good idea.
no
The Body
Its a permanent piercing. This is what they call the jewelry.
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!
Contact a local piercing studio they will tell you what the age requirements are for your area.
It sounds to me like your talking about a dermal or a horizontal navel piercing which is a surface piercing. But from the sound of it it's a dermal piercing because I've never seen a surface piercing with 3 balls unless there 3 different piercing in a row. I could help you more if I saw a picture of what your talking about.
It can be pierced anywhere you want
No absolutely not. It could get seriously infected and reject, leaving you with scarring.
A dermal anchor is not a piercing, but in fact a body modification. Now as for changing the top portion of the dermal anchor, the top must be unscrewed and the new top screwed into the anchor shaft. Dermal anchors always have interchangeable screw threads. There is a type of surface piercing without interchangeable attachments known as a Skin Diver. Removal of a dermal anchor must be done by a licensed medical practitioner in North America and most places in the E.U. removal by a body piercer is in fact practicing medicine without a license and is illegal.
Dermal anchors only have one entry point into the tissue. So for all intents this would be considered a piercing that doesn't have exit holes. Technically to be considered a piercing it should have an entry and an exit point, dermal anchors are actually not piercings but more body modifications considering there "implantation" into the tissue.
its a bar that goes under the skin and has two balls popping out on each side it is an alternative to a micro dermal piercing which is a surgical piercing implant
Belle at Las Vegas Tattoo Co in Ybor City.