An appropriate antibiotic at the right dosage and correct duration will usually reduce dental pain in a few days. Unfortunately, unless the cause of the infection is addressed and remedied, the infection and the pain will likely return shortly after the antibiotic is stopped.
Well , the first thing would be to find out the cause of pain.Your presumption of a new tooth coming may not necessarily be right. Your fever and tooth ache may be related. It may also not have anything to do with each other. If the tootache is due to dental infection then antibiotics may help . But beware ! Unless the cause is dealt with , antibiotics will only be a temporary measure.
It can help, but you need to see a dentist to get to the "root" of the problem.
Place a fractured or dislocated tooth in milk to temporarily preserve it.
and seriously - depends what is it caused by. anti inflammatory pills could be good if you have an infection somewhere in the root. just painkillers should help with "normal" tooth ache. and get to the dentist soon because with teeth it only gets worse.
Absolutely not. Tamiflu is a prescription medicine meant only to shorten the flu.
Yes, you can. It will work better if you alternate between the tramadol and ibuprofen to help with inflammation.
Penicillin is an antibiotic, not a painkiller. It won't help with the ache at all, but may begin to show results of the ache is caused by an infection after some days of use.
Egyptians believed that eating fried mice would help to cure a toothache.
vodka may help in that you may not notice the pain of a tooth infection as much, but it will not cure the infection. You will need an antibiotic to assist with that. Please see your dentist. Tooth infections may become severe and affect other parts of your body, such as your jaw or your heart.
If the toothache is cause by infection, then it should help the infection, since this is a member of the penicillin antibiotics, and is a broad spectrum antibiotic. But it will not help the actual pain. For that, you'll need to take aspirin, Tylenol, or a pain medication prescribed by your dentist.
If prescribed by a doctor or dentist then yes. If it doesn't work then they will try another kind of antibiotic but do not take antibiotics without consultation from your doctor or dentist as you can overdose on it.
NOO