Do you think women look good with nipple piercings and their clit pierced?
Why or why not?
Quote by avrgblkgrl
If there is "clint", I'm not even going to notice the piercing. I'm just going to tell her to go wash, with soap.
I'm sorry Sexy, I just couldn't help myself.
Quote by JohnC
I also do not find them to be a turn on or turn off by default. But I also would rather them not be there. The least distractions or "objects" to get in the way the better.
With that said, there is a very wide range of piercings and rings/studs/etc. that can be used. So even if pierced it can be ok, or very much NOT ok.
Quote by Sexyslut721I'm a fan of tongue and navel piercings. But, as far as your question goes, i'd say one or the other would be more sexy imo. When it comes to breasts, i think a unilateral piecing is sexier than bilateral piercings.
Do you think women look good with nipple piercings and their clit pierced?
Why or why not?
Quote by HeraTeleiaActually a competent will ask you to remove anything from the area of interest prior to the exam. If by chance they dont, then they should after the scout images, prior to the actual scan.
I don't know about "looking good", but I can tell you, if you ever need an MR or CT exam of your abdominal or pelvic region, a clit piercing will cause enough artifact or "noise" (essentially, something that obscures what we want to examine) to render the exam useless.
Quote by Ajax
Actually a competent will ask you to remove anything from the area of interest prior to the exam. If by chance they dont, then they should after the scout images, prior to the actual scan.
An MRI Tech would most definitely make sure that you dont have any metallic objects on your person before you enter the suite. atleast i would hope so.
Quote by HeraTeleiaYea i've had patients refuse also. but when i've explained that piercings degrade the quality of the exams then they more times than not, remove it. I think they get a little freaked out because of the personal nature of the request to remove thier genital jewelry. Belly rings are the bigger culprit though.
I've had patients straight up lie about metallic objects on their person, or forget entirely. Screening is only as good as the answers it elicits. And what of the patients who refuse to remove body jewellery in intimate areas, or do not know how to do so safely? My point was, if you're going to put semi-permanent metal objects in intimate areas, there may be consequences that are unforeseen.