As a piercer, I suggest people use wound wash saline solution instead of mixing sea salt and water themselves. The goal in making a seal salt solution (SSS), is to match the salinity in your body (0.9%), and promote new cell growth by drawing out the dead skin cells, since the SSS is a different PH balance than your bodies. If you can make a 0.9% salt solution, I'm impressed, and if you think you can't, buy/steal some wound wash saline solution (since your piercing is a wound, it's pre-made to 0.9%, and the PH balance is right). Use the saline solution on a q-tip, twice a day (three at most), gently brushing any crusted material off. For dimple piercings, I hope you had someone do them who knew what they were doing, as improperly placed ones might not ever heal. Really, doing them past the first molar is a bad idea, since your salival ducts can actually move to the piercing site (
Body Piercings )
For the oral care, definitely avoid oral sex for the first month, and I would use an alcohol free mouthwash once in the morning, once at night. For you anal people, after you eat drink or smoke you could rinse with water.
More info:
Oral Aftercare | Association of Professional Piercers
The problem is seeing five piercers gets you four different versions of aftercare, be smart, remember your body is an amazing fucking thing, and piercings have been successfully healed for hundreds of years without fancy chemicals.
In my case, my aftercare policies were passed down to me by Fakir Musafar, and I 100% believe that he's correct when saying wound wash saline solution > SSS > antibacterial soap > bactine > alcohol > etc
Hope this helps!
EDIT:
Also, in defense of camytrash, MOST people can heal piercings with just about anything as long as they are gentle and don't finger fuck it (fingers=dirt=infection), and aren't trying to constantly move it back in forth and spin it in circles (dead skin cells on your jewelry, you forcing it back and forth = tearing and never healing). Spit is often an extreme example I use, because I constantly get the question of "Well, my friend used <INSERT STRANGE FLUID OR OINTMENT HERE> to clean their piercing, and it healed just fine!". I try not to argue with success, and most people CAN heal piercings with almost ANYTHING on a q-tip, as long as they are brushing away dead skin cells and not being vigorous, but for the other part of the population that has trouble healing piercings, we have aftercare guidelines. Oh, and an eyebrow piercing is a "half" surface piercing, it has a frenum line running underneath it (kind of like the bottom of a dick). A bridge piercing is what I would also consider a "half" surface piercing, however that is no technical term. When properly placed, most people can heal bridges just fine, almost everyone who gets an eyebrow piercing and has it for 5+ years, faces some sort of migration or rejection.