Tinnitus in children represents a clinically significant condition with potential influence on auditory maturation, emotional stability, concentration, sleep quality, and academic performance. Limited symptom expression, developmental variability, and diverse underlying etiologies often delay recognition, creating the need for clearer diagnostic pathways. The objective of this narrative review is to consolidate contemporary understanding of diagnostic methods and treatment strategies applicable to pediatric tinnitus, with emphasis on developmental and neurocognitive factors that shape symptom perception and functional impact. A narrative methodology was applied, drawing on peer-reviewed publications from 2015 to 2025 identified across major scientific databases, with inclusion of studies providing clinically relevant pediatric information. The review outlines diagnostic approaches involving behavioral audiometry, objective auditory measures, medical and otologic evaluation, psychological assessment, and emerging digital tools, each supporting refined interpretation of peripheral and central auditory processes. Treatment strategies encompass sound-based interventions, amplification for coexisting hearing deficits, tinnitus retraining frameworks, cognitive-behavioral methods, mindfulness practices, and supportive family-centered engagement. The synthesis highlights the importance of multidisciplinary involvement and structured long-term care to accommodate developmental transitions. The conclusion emphasizes the need for standardized diagnostic protocols, validated objective tools, and expanded longitudinal evidence to enhance accuracy and guide targeted, developmentally appropriate management for children with tinnitus.
Palve et al. (Fri,) studied this question.