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Dental FAQs Demo › Dental FAQs › Which is better for emergency toothache: ibuprofen or acetaminophen?

Which is better for emergency toothache: ibuprofen or acetaminophen?

Published 9 May 2026
Would you recommend a hospital emergency room or a dedicated emergency dentist in Perth? What should I do if my tooth gets knocked out? Does Centrelink health care card cover dental? Does anyone who may have been or is in a similar situation as myself have any recommendations for dentists that are kind and ***truly*** non judgmental? I am a young adult with autism who has rarely visited the dentist unless I was in pain and needed an emergency extraction. What can be done for my teeth?

Ibuprofen is generally better for emergency toothaches because it is an anti-inflammatory that targets the swelling often responsible for dental pain. While acetaminophen effectively reduces pain signals, it does not address inflammation. For severe pain, clinical research suggests that combining both medications is more effective than taking either alone.

More questions

  • Would you recommend a hospital emergency room or a dedicated emergency dentist in Perth?
  • What should I do if my tooth gets knocked out?
  • Does Centrelink health care card cover dental?
  • Does anyone who may have been or is in a similar situation as myself have any recommendations for dentists that are kind and ***truly*** non judgmental?
  • I am a young adult with autism who has rarely visited the dentist unless I was in pain and needed an emergency extraction. What can be done for my teeth?
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