Ticks stick their heads in humans and suck their blood. If you are removing a tick do not squeeze the end (the bloodsack.) This can cause the blood that the tick has gotton from other animals into your bloodstream and may give you a disease. If ticks are attached to you long enugh(approx. 1-4 weeks) they can give you Lyme Disease.
It will be expelled by the body after three or four days. You can put antibiotic ointment and a bandage on it if you don't want to look at it.
The tick is a foreign object. The body will attempt to reject it and it may cause an infection. Consult a doctor.
Don't worry. The tick head is not going to 'do' anything, has no poison in it, and the body will soon repel it through the process of healing.
The body treats it like any foreign object, creates pus and expels the head after 3-4 days.
There are 22 bones in a human head
It is important to look at the tick when you remove it to see that you got the head as well as the body. If not, the head needs to be removed from under the skin. It will likely puff up and turn red to signify a foreign body is under the skin.
This tissues under the skin are swollen.
It is irregular-shaped because human skin cells don't have cell wall.
I believe that it is the head because the head ways 7 to 10 kgs depending on the person but if you include skin as a body part then skin is the answer
No
No, the layer of skin is called the "epidermis". Hypodermic means under the skin, from "hypo" (under, less) and "dermis" (skin). The word refers to a method of injection by needle as a medical treatment.
Being Human - 2011 I've Got You Under Your Skin 2-8 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
Yes it can.
Ticks bury their heads. Some types of fly lay eggs which hatch into maggots in the skin (there are some pretty rank photos on Google images of humans with magnet infestation. There are also lots of lesser known insects in various different countries which can burrow in human skin.
Bot fly