For pulpitis, you can take cephalosporin, which is also symptomatic and can relieve the symptoms of pulpitis to a certain extent, thus making pulpitis appear temporarily painless. Clinically, the majority of cases of pulpitis are caused by bacterial infection to the pulp, whether it is caries infected to the pulp step by step through the cavity of hard tissue, or some periodontal lesions directed to the pulp. As a broad-spectrum antibiotic commonly used in clinical practice, cephalosporin itself has a good inhibitory effect on bacteria, so from this perspective, it is right to take cephalosporin for anti-inflammation when you have pulpitis. However, it should be clinically explained to the patient that taking cephalosporin can relieve the symptoms of this condition, but it is not a cure for the symptoms. The fundamental solution is to find the cause of pulpitis. For example, if the pulpitis is caused by tooth decay, the decayed area should be removed and root canal treatment should be performed. If the pulpitis is caused by periodontal disease, then in addition to root canal treatment, periodontal treatment is also required. These are the ways to cure this kind of pulpitis, and it is impossible to cure this kind of disease by simply taking anti-inflammatory drugs.