Pediatric dental anxiety remains a prevalent and clinically significant barrier to effective oral healthcare, affecting treatment compliance, pain perception, and long-term oral health behaviors. Early negative dental experiences can consolidate maladaptive fear responses through neurobiological stress pathways and associative learning mechanisms, contributing to persistent avoidance and increased disease burden. This narrative review synthesizes contemporary evidence on behavioral and cognitive strategies for anxiety management in pediatric dentistry, integrating psychological theory, clinical frameworks, and emerging innovations. Core non-pharmacological approaches, including Tell-Show-Do (TSD), positive reinforcement, modeling, graded exposure, cognitive restructuring, relaxation training, and trauma-informed communication, are examined in relation to developmental stages, parental influence, and neurobiological underpinnings of fear regulation. The role of family-centered interventions and culturally responsive communication in strengthening therapeutic alliance and emotional security is highlighted. Pharmacological adjuncts, particularly nitrous oxide sedation and selected oral anxiolytics, are discussed as complementary modalities when behavioral strategies alone are insufficient. Emphasis is placed on integrative models that prioritize skill acquisition, emotional resilience, and gradual reduction in pharmacological reliance. Despite heterogeneity in study designs and outcome measures, current evidence supports child-centered, psychologically informed care as the cornerstone of sustainable anxiety management. Advancing standardized assessment tools and longitudinal research will further refine individualized, ethically grounded approaches in modern pediatric dentistry.
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Hend Ahmed Alfadhli
University of Jeddah
Queen Deka
University of Bari Aldo Moro
Indranil Samanta
Armed Forces Medical College
Cureus
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Alfadhli et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69db37044fe01fead37c4f16 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.106784