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Can you use Listerine after tongue piercing?
Continue your regular oral hygiene routine as your tongue piercing heals, but be gentle. If you normally use an alcohol-based mouthwash like Listerine, switch to a gentle, breath-freshening, non-alcoholic alternative like Recovery Oral Piercing Aftercare during the tongue piercing healing process.
How long do I have to use mouthwash after a tongue piercing?
Listerine should be diluted 50:50 using distilled water. A sea salt rinse is 1/8 teaspoon of sea salt dissolved into 8 oz of warm water. Continue to rinse for 6-8 weeks. Gently brush your tongue in the morning and at night after brushing your teeth.
How do you clean tongue piercings after they heal?
Oral Piercing Care Rinse your tongue or lip piercing after every meal or snack and before bed. Use warm salt water or an antibacterial, alcohol-free mouthwash. Not kiss anyone while you heal. (Avoid contact with someone else’s saliva.)
Is Listerine good for piercings?
Avoid irritants like: rubbing alcohol, iodine, hydrogen peroxide, Listerine, antibiotic ointments, antibacterial soaps, Gly-oxide and pierced ear solutions. These items will not help your piercing heal; instead they will prolong your healing time.
Which Listerine does not have alcohol?
LISTERINE ZERO®
Fighting Germs Can Be Intense. Your Mouthwash Doesn’t Need To Be. Try LISTERINE ZERO®, With Zero Alcohol.
What happens if you use alcohol mouthwash with tongue piercing?
Avoid using mouthwash containing alcohol. It can irritate the piercing and delay healing. Avoid oral sexual contact including French (wet) kissing or oral sex during healing (even with a long-term partner).
How do you disinfect a tongue ring?
Submerge the tongue ring in a small cup of rubbing alcohol or peroxide and let it sit for 10 minutes. Rinse before wearing. Soak the tongue ring in mouthwash. Remember, the same bacteria on the tongue ring are in your mouth.
What mouthwash do you use for mouth piercings?
The Recovery Piercing Aftercare Sea Salt Mouth Rinse is the perfect saltwater mouth rinse for any kind of oral piercing (lip, cheek, tongue) to help promote quick and clean healing. Dentists and oral surgeons also recommend this salt water mouthwash after tooth extractions and other oral surgeries.
Can I use mouthwash to clean my piercing?
Ask your doctor.) If you choose to use mouthwash instead of salt water, stay away from alcohol-based products like Listerine® and similar store brands. These are far too harsh, and repeated use can actually slow down healing. Instead, use a mild, alcohol-free mouth rinse.
Is Listerine bad for your mouth?
May be linked with increased cancer risk Mouthwash may also contain synthetic ingredients that have been linked to an increased risk of certain cancers. A 2016 study concluded that people who regularly use mouthwash may have a slightly elevated risk of head and neck cancers than people who never used mouthwash.
Which Listerine is best?
1. Listerine Total Care: The best all-round mouthwash – if you don’t mind the sting. Listerine dominates the mouthwash market, and Total Care is its flagship product. Boldly, it claims to kill up to 97% of germs, while reducing plaque by up to 56% more than brushing alone.
What to do with your mouth after a tongue piercing?
Continue your regular oral hygiene routine as your tongue piercing heals, but be gentle. If you normally use an alcohol-based mouthwash like Listerine, switch to a gentle, breath-freshening, non-alcoholic alternative like Recovery Oral Piercing Aftercare during the tongue piercing healing process. What does a tongue piercing say about you?
How to clean a tongue ring with mouthwash?
Alternatively, you can use one of the following procedure to clean your ring: 1 Soak the ring in hydrogen peroxide for a few minutes before rinsing it in warm water. 2 Dab a cotton wool soaked in alcohol, or use alcohol wipes, all over the ring,… 3 Soak the tongue ring in non-alcohol mouthwash for 1-2 minutes.
What’s the best way to clean your tongue?
Before you even touch your tongue, you should ensure that it is clean and free of germs. To do that, cleanse your hands with antibacterial soap and water. Rinse your tongue with a saline solution every day in the morning and in the evening, and after eating or taking a drink.