Do more pregnancies increase the risk of... | F1000Research "use strict";function _typeof(t){return(_typeof="function"==typeof Symbol&&"symbol"==typeof Symbol.iterator?function(t){return typeof t}:function(t){return t&&"function"==typeof Symbol&&t.constructor===Symbol&&t!==Symbol.prototype?"symbol":typeof t})(t)}!function(){var t=function(){var t,e,o=[],n=window,r=n;for(;r;){try{if(r.frames.__tcfapiLocator){t=r;break}}catch(t){}if(r===n.top)break;r=r.parent}t||(!function t(){var e=n.document,o=!!n.frames.__tcfapiLocator;if(!o)if(e.body){var r=e.createElement("iframe");r.style.cssText="display:none",r.name="__tcfapiLocator",e.body.appendChild(r)}else setTimeout(t,5);return!o}(),n.__tcfapi=function(){for(var t=arguments.length,n=new Array(t),r=0;r 3&&2===parseInt(n[1],10)&&"boolean"==typeof n[3]&&(e=n[3],"function"==typeof n[2]&&n[2]("set",!0)):"ping"===n[0]?"function"==typeof n[2]&&n[2]({gdprApplies:e,cmpLoaded:!1,cmpStatus:"stub"}):o.push(n)},n.addEventListener("message",(function(t){var e="string"==typeof t.data,o={};if(e)try{o=JSON.parse(t.data)}catch(t){}else o=t.data;var n="object"===_typeof(o)&&null!==o?o.__tcfapiCall:null;n&&window.__tcfapi(n.command,n.version,(function(o,r){var a={__tcfapiReturn:{returnValue:o,success:r,callId:n.callId}};t&&t.source&&t.source.postMessage&&t.source.postMessage(e?JSON.stringify(a):a,"*")}),n.parameter)}),!1))};"undefined"!=typeof module?module.exports=t:t()}(); dataLayer = dataLayer || []; // Standard GTM initialization - Google Consent Mode handles consent automatically (function(w,d,s,l,i){w[l]=w[l]||[];w[l].push({'gtm.start': new Date().getTime(),event:'gtm.js'});var f=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0], j=d.createElement(s),dl=l!='dataLayer'?'&l='+l:'';j.async=true;j.src= 'https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtm.js?id='+i+dl+ '>m_auth=hzk0Vc3qFsQYhCrIoHz68A>m_preview=env-1>m_cookies_win=x';f.parentNode.insertBefore(j,f); })(window,document,'script','dataLayer','GTM-MWFK8L5J'); ;window.NREUM||(NREUM={});NREUM.init={distributed_tracing:{enabled:true},privacy:{cookies_enabled:true},ajax:{deny_list:["bam.nr-data.net"]}}; ;NREUM.loader_config={accountID:"438030",trustKey:"438030",agentID:"772317073",licenseKey:"97f8f67f26",applicationID:"772317073"} ;NREUM.info={beacon:"bam.nr-data.net",errorBeacon:"bam.nr-data.net",licenseKey:"97f8f67f26",applicationID:"772317073",sa:1} ;/*! For license information please see nr-loader-spa-1.236.0.min.js.LICENSE.txt */ (()=>{"use strict";var e,t,r={5763:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{P_:()=>l,Mt:()=>g,C5:()=>s,DL:()=>v,OP:()=>T,lF:()=>D,Yu:()=>y,Dg:()=>h,CX:()=>c,GE:()=>b,sU:()=>_});var n=r(8632),i=r(9567);const o={beacon:n.ce.beacon,errorBeacon:n.ce.errorBeacon,licenseKey:void 0,applicationID:void 0,sa:void 0,queueTime:void 0,applicationTime:void 0,ttGuid:void 0,user:void 0,account:void 0,product:void 0,extra:void 0,jsAttributes:{},userAttributes:void 0,atts:void 0,transactionName:void 0,tNamePlain:void 0},a={};function s(e){if(!e)throw new Error("All info objects require an agent identifier!");if(!a[e])throw new Error("Info for ".concat(e," was never set"));return a[e]}function c(e,t){if(!e)throw new Error("All info objects require an agent identifier!");a[e]=(0,i.D)(t,o),(0,n.Qy)(e,a[e],"info")}var u=r(7056);const d=()=>{const e={blockSelector:"[data-nr-block]",maskInputOptions:{password:!0}};return{allow_bfcache:!0,privacy:{cookies_enabled:!0},ajax:{deny_list:void 0,enabled:!0,harvestTimeSeconds:10},distributed_tracing:{enabled:void 0,exclude_newrelic_header:void 0,cors_use_newrelic_header:void 0,cors_use_tracecontext_headers:void 0,allowed_origins:void 0},session:{domain:void 0,expiresMs:u.oD,inactiveMs:u.Hb},ssl:void 0,obfuscate:void 0,jserrors:{enabled:!0,harvestTimeSeconds:10},metrics:{enabled:!0},page_action:{enabled:!0,harvestTimeSeconds:30},page_view_event:{enabled:!0},page_view_timing:{enabled:!0,harvestTimeSeconds:30,long_task:!1},session_trace:{enabled:!0,harvestTimeSeconds:10},harvest:{tooManyRequestsDelay:60},session_replay:{enabled:!1,harvestTimeSeconds:60,sampleRate:.1,errorSampleRate:.1,maskTextSelector:"*",maskAllInputs:!0,get blockClass(){return"nr-block"},get ignoreClass(){return"nr-ignore"},get maskTextClass(){return"nr-mask"},get blockSelector(){return e.blockSelector},set blockSelector(t){e.blockSelector+=",".concat(t)},get maskInputOptions(){return e.maskInputOptions},set maskInputOptions(t){e.maskInputOptions={...t,password:!0}}},spa:{enabled:!0,harvestTimeSeconds:10}}},f={};function l(e){if(!e)throw new Error("All configuration objects require an agent identifier!");if(!f[e])throw new Error("Configuration for ".concat(e," was never set"));return f[e]}function h(e,t){if(!e)throw new Error("All configuration objects require an agent identifier!");f[e]=(0,i.D)(t,d()),(0,n.Qy)(e,f[e],"config")}function g(e,t){if(!e)throw new Error("All configuration objects require an agent identifier!");var r=l(e);if(r){for(var n=t.split("."),i=0;i {r.d(t,{D:()=>i});var n=r(50);function i(e,t){try{if(!e||"object"!=typeof e)return(0,n.Z)("Setting a Configurable requires an object as input");if(!t||"object"!=typeof t)return(0,n.Z)("Setting a Configurable requires a model to set its initial properties");const r=Object.create(Object.getPrototypeOf(t),Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptors(t)),o=0===Object.keys(r).length?e:r;for(let a in o)if(void 0!==e[a])try{"object"==typeof e[a]&&"object"==typeof t[a]?r[a]=i(e[a],t[a]):r[a]=e[a]}catch(e){(0,n.Z)("An error occurred while setting a property of a Configurable",e)}return r}catch(e){(0,n.Z)("An error occured while setting a Configurable",e)}}},6818:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{Re:()=>i,gF:()=>o,q4:()=>n});const n="1.236.0",i="PROD",o="CDN"},385:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{FN:()=>a,IF:()=>u,Nk:()=>f,Tt:()=>s,_A:()=>o,il:()=>n,pL:()=>c,v6:()=>i,w1:()=>d});const n="undefined"!=typeof window&&!!window.document,i="undefined"!=typeof WorkerGlobalScope&&("undefined"!=typeof self&&self instanceof WorkerGlobalScope&&self.navigator instanceof WorkerNavigator||"undefined"!=typeof globalThis&&globalThis instanceof WorkerGlobalScope&&globalThis.navigator instanceof WorkerNavigator),o=n?window:"undefined"!=typeof WorkerGlobalScope&&("undefined"!=typeof self&&self instanceof WorkerGlobalScope&&self||"undefined"!=typeof globalThis&&globalThis instanceof WorkerGlobalScope&&globalThis),a=""+o?.location,s=/iPad|iPhone|iPod/.test(navigator.userAgent),c=s&&"undefined"==typeof SharedWorker,u=(()=>{const e=navigator.userAgent.match(/Firefox[/\s](\d+\.\d+)/);return Array.isArray(e)&&e.length>=2?+e[1]:0})(),d=Boolean(n&&window.document.documentMode),f=!!navigator.sendBeacon},1117:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{w:()=>o});var n=r(50);const i={agentIdentifier:"",ee:void 0};class o{constructor(e){try{if("object"!=typeof e)return(0,n.Z)("shared context requires an object as input");this.sharedContext={},Object.assign(this.sharedContext,i),Object.entries(e).forEach((e=>{let[t,r]=e;Object.keys(i).includes(t)&&(this.sharedContext[t]=r)}))}catch(e){(0,n.Z)("An error occured while setting SharedContext",e)}}}},8e3:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{L:()=>d,R:()=>c});var n=r(2177),i=r(1284),o=r(4322),a=r(3325);const s={};function c(e,t){const r={staged:!1,priority:a.p[t]||0};u(e),s[e].get(t)||s[e].set(t,r)}function u(e){e&&(s[e]||(s[e]=new Map))}function d(){let e=arguments.length>0&&void 0!==arguments[0]?arguments[0]:"",t=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:"feature";if(u(e),!e||!s[e].get(t))return a(t);s[e].get(t).staged=!0;const r=[...s[e]];function a(t){const r=e?n.ee.get(e):n.ee,a=o.X.handlers;if(r.backlog&&a){var s=r.backlog[t],c=a[t];if(c){for(var u=0;s&&u {let[t,r]=e;return r.staged}))&&(r.sort(((e,t)=>e[1].priority-t[1].priority)),r.forEach((e=>{let[t]=e;a(t)})))}function f(e,t){var r=e[1];(0,i.D)(t[r],(function(t,r){var n=e[0];if(r[0]===n){var i=r[1],o=e[3],a=e[2];i.apply(o,a)}}))}},2177:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{c:()=>f,ee:()=>u});var n=r(8632),i=r(2210),o=r(1284),a=r(5763),s="nr@context";let c=(0,n.fP)();var u;function d(){}function f(e){return(0,i.X)(e,s,l)}function l(){return new d}function h(){u.aborted=!0,u.backlog={}}c.ee?u=c.ee:(u=function e(t,r){var n={},c={},f={},g=!1;try{g=16===r.length&&(0,a.OP)(r).isolatedBacklog}catch(e){}var p={on:b,addEventListener:b,removeEventListener:y,emit:v,get:x,listeners:w,context:m,buffer:A,abort:h,aborted:!1,isBuffering:E,debugId:r,backlog:g?{}:t&&"object"==typeof t.backlog?t.backlog:{}};return p;function m(e){return e&&e instanceof d?e:e?(0,i.X)(e,s,l):l()}function v(e,r,n,i,o){if(!1!==o&&(o=!0),!u.aborted||i){t&&o&&t.emit(e,r,n);for(var a=m(n),s=w(e),d=s.length,f=0;fn,p:()=>i});var n=r(2177).ee.get("handle");function i(e,t,r,i,o){o?(o.buffer([e],i),o.emit(e,t,r)):(n.buffer([e],i),n.emit(e,t,r))}},4322:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{X:()=>o});var n=r(5546);o.on=a;var i=o.handlers={};function o(e,t,r,o){a(o||n.E,i,e,t,r)}function a(e,t,r,i,o){o||(o="feature"),e||(e=n.E);var a=t[o]=t[o]||{};(a[r]=a[r]||[]).push([e,i])}},3239:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{bP:()=>s,iz:()=>c,m$:()=>a});var n=r(385);let i=!1,o=!1;try{const e={get passive(){return i=!0,!1},get signal(){return o=!0,!1}};n._A.addEventListener("test",null,e),n._A.removeEventListener("test",null,e)}catch(e){}function a(e,t){return i||o?{capture:!!e,passive:i,signal:t}:!!e}function s(e,t){let r=arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2]&&arguments[2],n=arguments.length>3?arguments[3]:void 0;window.addEventListener(e,t,a(r,n))}function c(e,t){let r=arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2]&&arguments[2],n=arguments.length>3?arguments[3]:void 0;document.addEventListener(e,t,a(r,n))}},4402:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{Ht:()=>u,M:()=>c,Rl:()=>a,ky:()=>s});var n=r(385);const i="xxxxxxxx-xxxx-4xxx-yxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx";function o(e,t){return e?15&e[t]:16*Math.random()|0}function a(){const e=n._A?.crypto||n._A?.msCrypto;let t,r=0;return e&&e.getRandomValues&&(t=e.getRandomValues(new Uint8Array(31))),i.split("").map((e=>"x"===e?o(t,++r).toString(16):"y"===e?(3&o()|8).toString(16):e)).join("")}function s(e){const t=n._A?.crypto||n._A?.msCrypto;let r,i=0;t&&t.getRandomValues&&(r=t.getRandomValues(new Uint8Array(31)));const a=[];for(var s=0;s {r.d(t,{Bq:()=>n,Hb:()=>o,oD:()=>i});const n="NRBA",i=144e5,o=18e5},7894:(e,t,r)=>{function n(){return Math.round(performance.now())}r.d(t,{z:()=>n})},7243:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{e:()=>o});var n=r(385),i={};function o(e){if(e in i)return i[e];if(0===(e||"").indexOf("data:"))return{protocol:"data"};let t;var r=n._A?.location,o={};if(n.il)t=document.createElement("a"),t.href=e;else try{t=new URL(e,r.href)}catch(e){return o}o.port=t.port;var a=t.href.split("://");!o.port&&a[1]&&(o.port=a[1].split("/")[0].split("@").pop().split(":")[1]),o.port&&"0"!==o.port||(o.port="https"===a[0]?"443":"80"),o.hostname=t.hostname||r.hostname,o.pathname=t.pathname,o.protocol=a[0],"/"!==o.pathname.charAt(0)&&(o.pathname="/"+o.pathname);var s=!t.protocol||":"===t.protocol||t.protocol===r.protocol,c=t.hostname===r.hostname&&t.port===r.port;return o.sameOrigin=s&&(!t.hostname||c),"/"===o.pathname&&(i[e]=o),o}},50:(e,t,r)=>{function n(e,t){"function"==typeof console.warn&&(console.warn("New Relic: ".concat(e)),t&&console.warn(t))}r.d(t,{Z:()=>n})},2587:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{N:()=>c,T:()=>u});var n=r(2177),i=r(5546),o=r(8e3),a=r(3325);const s={stn:[a.D.sessionTrace],err:[a.D.jserrors,a.D.metrics],ins:[a.D.pageAction],spa:[a.D.spa],sr:[a.D.sessionReplay,a.D.sessionTrace]};function c(e,t){const r=n.ee.get(t);e&&"object"==typeof e&&(Object.entries(e).forEach((e=>{let[t,n]=e;void 0===u[t]&&(s[t]?s[t].forEach((e=>{n?(0,i.p)("feat-"+t,[],void 0,e,r):(0,i.p)("block-"+t,[],void 0,e,r),(0,i.p)("rumresp-"+t,[Boolean(n)],void 0,e,r)})):n&&(0,i.p)("feat-"+t,[],void 0,void 0,r),u[t]=Boolean(n))})),Object.keys(s).forEach((e=>{void 0===u[e]&&(s[e]?.forEach((t=>(0,i.p)("rumresp-"+e,[!1],void 0,t,r))),u[e]=!1)})),(0,o.L)(t,a.D.pageViewEvent))}const u={}},2210:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{X:()=>i});var n=Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty;function i(e,t,r){if(n.call(e,t))return e[t];var i=r();if(Object.defineProperty&&Object.keys)try{return Object.defineProperty(e,t,{value:i,writable:!0,enumerable:!1}),i}catch(e){}return e[t]=i,i}},1284:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{D:()=>n});const n=(e,t)=>Object.entries(e||{}).map((e=>{let[r,n]=e;return t(r,n)}))},4351:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{P:()=>o});var n=r(2177);const i=()=>{const e=new WeakSet;return(t,r)=>{if("object"==typeof r&&null!==r){if(e.has(r))return;e.add(r)}return r}};function o(e){try{return JSON.stringify(e,i())}catch(e){try{n.ee.emit("internal-error",[e])}catch(e){}}}},3960:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{K:()=>a,b:()=>o});var n=r(3239);function i(){return"undefined"==typeof document||"complete"===document.readyState}function o(e,t){if(i())return e();(0,n.bP)("load",e,t)}function a(e){if(i())return e();(0,n.iz)("DOMContentLoaded",e)}},8632:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{EZ:()=>u,Qy:()=>c,ce:()=>o,fP:()=>a,gG:()=>d,mF:()=>s});var n=r(7894),i=r(385);const o={beacon:"bam.nr-data.net",errorBeacon:"bam.nr-data.net"};function a(){return i._A.NREUM||(i._A.NREUM={}),void 0===i._A.newrelic&&(i._A.newrelic=i._A.NREUM),i._A.NREUM}function s(){let e=a();return e.o||(e.o={ST:i._A.setTimeout,SI:i._A.setImmediate,CT:i._A.clearTimeout,XHR:i._A.XMLHttpRequest,REQ:i._A.Request,EV:i._A.Event,PR:i._A.Promise,MO:i._A.MutationObserver,FETCH:i._A.fetch}),e}function c(e,t,r){let i=a();const o=i.initializedAgents||{},s=o[e]||{};return Object.keys(s).length||(s.initializedAt={ms:(0,n.z)(),date:new Date}),i.initializedAgents={...o,[e]:{...s,[r]:t}},i}function u(e,t){a()[e]=t}function d(){return function(){let e=a();const t=e.info||{};e.info={beacon:o.beacon,errorBeacon:o.errorBeacon,...t}}(),function(){let e=a();const t=e.init||{};e.init={...t}}(),s(),function(){let e=a();const t=e.loader_config||{};e.loader_config={...t}}(),a()}},7956:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{N:()=>i});var n=r(3239);function i(e){let t=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]&&arguments[1],r=arguments.length>2?arguments[2]:void 0,i=arguments.length>3?arguments[3]:void 0;return void(0,n.iz)("visibilitychange",(function(){if(t)return void("hidden"==document.visibilityState&&e());e(document.visibilityState)}),r,i)}},1214:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{em:()=>v,u5:()=>N,QU:()=>S,_L:()=>I,Gm:()=>L,Lg:()=>M,gy:()=>U,BV:()=>Q,Kf:()=>ee});var n=r(2177);const i="nr@original";var o=Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty,a=!1;function s(e,t){return e||(e=n.ee),r.inPlace=function(e,t,n,i,o){n||(n="");var a,s,c,u="-"===n.charAt(0);for(c=0;c 2?n-2:0),o=2;o {r(A[T],e,w),r(E[T],e,w)})),r(l._A,"fetch",y),t.on(y+"end",(function(e,r){var n=this;if(r){var i=r.headers.get("content-length");null!==i&&(n.rxSize=i),t.emit(y+"done",[null,r],n)}else t.emit(y+"done",[e],n)})),t}const O={},j=["pushState","replaceState"];function S(e){const t=function(e){return(e||n.ee).get("history")}(e);return!l.il||O[t.debugId]++||(O[t.debugId]=1,s(t).inPlace(window.history,j,"-")),t}var P=r(3239);const C={},R=["appendChild","insertBefore","replaceChild"];function I(e){const t=function(e){return(e||n.ee).get("jsonp")}(e);if(!l.il||C[t.debugId])return t;C[t.debugId]=!0;var r=s(t),i=/[?&](?:callback|cb)=([^&#]+)/,o=/(.*)\.([^.]+)/,a=/^(\w+)(\.|$)(.*)$/;function c(e,t){var r=e.match(a),n=r[1],i=r[3];return i?c(i,t[n]):t[n]}return r.inPlace(Node.prototype,R,"dom-"),t.on("dom-start",(function(e){!function(e){if(!e||"string"!=typeof e.nodeName||"script"!==e.nodeName.toLowerCase())return;if("function"!=typeof e.addEventListener)return;var n=(a=e.src,s=a.match(i),s?s[1]:null);var a,s;if(!n)return;var u=function(e){var t=e.match(o);if(t&&t.length>=3)return{key:t[2],parent:c(t[1],window)};return{key:e,parent:window}}(n);if("function"!=typeof u.parent[u.key])return;var d={};function f(){t.emit("jsonp-end",[],d),e.removeEventListener("load",f,(0,P.m$)(!1)),e.removeEventListener("error",l,(0,P.m$)(!1))}function l(){t.emit("jsonp-error",[],d),t.emit("jsonp-end",[],d),e.removeEventListener("load",f,(0,P.m$)(!1)),e.removeEventListener("error",l,(0,P.m$)(!1))}r.inPlace(u.parent,[u.key],"cb-",d),e.addEventListener("load",f,(0,P.m$)(!1)),e.addEventListener("error",l,(0,P.m$)(!1)),t.emit("new-jsonp",[e.src],d)}(e[0])})),t}var k=r(5763);const H={};function L(e){const t=function(e){return(e||n.ee).get("mutation")}(e);if(!l.il||H[t.debugId])return t;H[t.debugId]=!0;var r=s(t),i=k.Yu.MO;return i&&(window.MutationObserver=function(e){return this instanceof i?new i(r(e,"fn-")):i.apply(this,arguments)},MutationObserver.prototype=i.prototype),t}const z={};function M(e){const t=function(e){return(e||n.ee).get("promise")}(e);if(z[t.debugId])return t;z[t.debugId]=!0;var r=n.c,o=s(t),a=k.Yu.PR;return a&&function(){function e(r){var n=t.context(),i=o(r,"executor-",n,null,!1);const s=Reflect.construct(a,[i],e);return t.context(s).getCtx=function(){return n},s}l._A.Promise=e,Object.defineProperty(e,"name",{value:"Promise"}),e.toString=function(){return a.toString()},Object.setPrototypeOf(e,a),["all","race"].forEach((function(r){const n=a[r];e[r]=function(e){let i=!1;[...e||[]].forEach((e=>{this.resolve(e).then(a("all"===r),a(!1))}));const o=n.apply(this,arguments);return o;function a(e){return function(){t.emit("propagate",[null,!i],o,!1,!1),i=i||!e}}}})),["resolve","reject"].forEach((function(r){const n=a[r];e[r]=function(e){const r=n.apply(this,arguments);return e!==r&&t.emit("propagate",[e,!0],r,!1,!1),r}})),e.prototype=a.prototype;const n=a.prototype.then;a.prototype.then=function(){var e=this,i=r(e);i.promise=e;for(var a=arguments.length,s=new Array(a),c=0;c e())),t};function m(e,t){i.inPlace(t,["onreadystatechange"],"fn-",E)}function b(){var e=this,t=r.context(e);e.readyState>3&&!t.resolved&&(t.resolved=!0,r.emit("xhr-resolved",[],e)),i.inPlace(e,f,"fn-",E)}if(function(e,t){for(var r in e)t[r]=e[r]}(o,p),p.prototype=o.prototype,i.inPlace(p.prototype,J,"-xhr-",E),r.on("send-xhr-start",(function(e,t){m(e,t),function(e){h.push(e),a&&(y?y.then(A):u?u(A):(w=-w,x.data=w))}(t)})),r.on("open-xhr-start",m),a){var y=c&&c.resolve();if(!u&&!c){var w=1,x=document.createTextNode(w);new a(A).observe(x,{characterData:!0})}}else t.on("fn-end",(function(e){e[0]&&e[0].type===d||A()}));function A(){for(var e=0;e {r.d(t,{t:()=>n});const n=r(3325).D.ajax},6660:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{A:()=>i,t:()=>n});const n=r(3325).D.jserrors,i="nr@seenError"},3081:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{gF:()=>o,mY:()=>i,t9:()=>n,vz:()=>s,xS:()=>a});const n=r(3325).D.metrics,i="sm",o="cm",a="storeSupportabilityMetrics",s="storeEventMetrics"},4649:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{t:()=>n});const n=r(3325).D.pageAction},7633:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{Dz:()=>i,OJ:()=>a,qw:()=>o,t9:()=>n});const n=r(3325).D.pageViewEvent,i="firstbyte",o="domcontent",a="windowload"},9251:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{t:()=>n});const n=r(3325).D.pageViewTiming},3614:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{BST_RESOURCE:()=>i,END:()=>s,FEATURE_NAME:()=>n,FN_END:()=>u,FN_START:()=>c,PUSH_STATE:()=>d,RESOURCE:()=>o,START:()=>a});const n=r(3325).D.sessionTrace,i="bstResource",o="resource",a="-start",s="-end",c="fn"+a,u="fn"+s,d="pushState"},7836:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{BODY:()=>A,CB_END:()=>E,CB_START:()=>u,END:()=>x,FEATURE_NAME:()=>i,FETCH:()=>_,FETCH_BODY:()=>v,FETCH_DONE:()=>m,FETCH_START:()=>p,FN_END:()=>c,FN_START:()=>s,INTERACTION:()=>l,INTERACTION_API:()=>d,INTERACTION_EVENTS:()=>o,JSONP_END:()=>b,JSONP_NODE:()=>g,JS_TIME:()=>T,MAX_TIMER_BUDGET:()=>a,REMAINING:()=>f,SPA_NODE:()=>h,START:()=>w,originalSetTimeout:()=>y});var n=r(5763);const i=r(3325).D.spa,o=["click","submit","keypress","keydown","keyup","change"],a=999,s="fn-start",c="fn-end",u="cb-start",d="api-ixn-",f="remaining",l="interaction",h="spaNode",g="jsonpNode",p="fetch-start",m="fetch-done",v="fetch-body-",b="jsonp-end",y=n.Yu.ST,w="-start",x="-end",A="-body",E="cb"+x,T="jsTime",_="fetch"},5938:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{W:()=>o});var n=r(5763),i=r(2177);class o{constructor(e,t,r){this.agentIdentifier=e,this.aggregator=t,this.ee=i.ee.get(e,(0,n.OP)(this.agentIdentifier).isolatedBacklog),this.featureName=r,this.blocked=!1}}},9144:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{j:()=>m});var n=r(3325),i=r(5763),o=r(5546),a=r(2177),s=r(7894),c=r(8e3),u=r(3960),d=r(385),f=r(50),l=r(3081),h=r(8632);function g(){const e=(0,h.gG)();["setErrorHandler","finished","addToTrace","inlineHit","addRelease","addPageAction","setCurrentRouteName","setPageViewName","setCustomAttribute","interaction","noticeError","setUserId"].forEach((t=>{e[t]=function(){for(var r=arguments.length,n=new Array(r),i=0;i 1?r-1:0),i=1;i {e.exposed&&e.api[t]&&o.push(e.api[t](...n))})),o.length>1?o:o[0]}(t,...n)}}))}var p=r(2587);function m(e){let t=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:{},m=arguments.length>2?arguments[2]:void 0,v=arguments.length>3?arguments[3]:void 0,{init:b,info:y,loader_config:w,runtime:x={loaderType:m},exposed:A=!0}=t;const E=(0,h.gG)();y||(b=E.init,y=E.info,w=E.loader_config),(0,i.Dg)(e,b||{}),(0,i.GE)(e,w||{}),(0,i.sU)(e,x),y.jsAttributes??={},d.v6&&(y.jsAttributes.isWorker=!0),(0,i.CX)(e,y),g();const T=function(e,t){t||(0,c.R)(e,"api");const h={};var g=a.ee.get(e),p=g.get("tracer"),m="api-",v=m+"ixn-";function b(t,r,n,o){const a=(0,i.C5)(e);return null===r?delete a.jsAttributes[t]:(0,i.CX)(e,{...a,jsAttributes:{...a.jsAttributes,[t]:r}}),x(m,n,!0,o||null===r?"session":void 0)(t,r)}function y(){}["setErrorHandler","finished","addToTrace","inlineHit","addRelease"].forEach((e=>h[e]=x(m,e,!0,"api"))),h.addPageAction=x(m,"addPageAction",!0,n.D.pageAction),h.setCurrentRouteName=x(m,"routeName",!0,n.D.spa),h.setPageViewName=function(t,r){if("string"==typeof t)return"/"!==t.charAt(0)&&(t="/"+t),(0,i.OP)(e).customTransaction=(r||"http://custom.transaction")+t,x(m,"setPageViewName",!0)()},h.setCustomAttribute=function(e,t){let r=arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2]&&arguments[2];if("string"==typeof e){if(["string","number"].includes(typeof t)||null===t)return b(e,t,"setCustomAttribute",r);(0,f.Z)("Failed to execute setCustomAttribute.\nNon-null value must be a string or number type, but a type of was provided."))}else(0,f.Z)("Failed to execute setCustomAttribute.\nName must be a string type, but a type of was provided."))},h.setUserId=function(e){if("string"==typeof e||null===e)return b("enduser.id",e,"setUserId",!0);(0,f.Z)("Failed to execute setUserId.\nNon-null value must be a string type, but a type of was provided."))},h.interaction=function(){return(new y).get()};var w=y.prototype={createTracer:function(e,t){var r={},i=this,a="function"==typeof t;return(0,o.p)(v+"tracer",[(0,s.z)(),e,r],i,n.D.spa,g),function(){if(p.emit((a?"":"no-")+"fn-start",[(0,s.z)(),i,a],r),a)try{return t.apply(this,arguments)}catch(e){throw p.emit("fn-err",[arguments,this,"string"==typeof e?new Error(e):e],r),e}finally{p.emit("fn-end",[(0,s.z)()],r)}}}};function x(e,t,r,i){return function(){return(0,o.p)(l.xS,["API/"+t+"/called"],void 0,n.D.metrics,g),i&&(0,o.p)(e+t,[(0,s.z)(),...arguments],r?null:this,i,g),r?void 0:this}}function A(){r.e(439).then(r.bind(r,7438)).then((t=>{let{setAPI:r}=t;r(e),(0,c.L)(e,"api")})).catch((()=>(0,f.Z)("Downloading runtime APIs failed...")))}return["actionText","setName","setAttribute","save","ignore","onEnd","getContext","end","get"].forEach((e=>{w[e]=x(v,e,void 0,n.D.spa)})),h.noticeError=function(e,t){"string"==typeof e&&(e=new Error(e)),(0,o.p)(l.xS,["API/noticeError/called"],void 0,n.D.metrics,g),(0,o.p)("err",[e,(0,s.z)(),!1,t],void 0,n.D.jserrors,g)},d.il?(0,u.b)((()=>A()),!0):A(),h}(e,v);return(0,h.Qy)(e,T,"api"),(0,h.Qy)(e,A,"exposed"),(0,h.EZ)("activatedFeatures",p.T),T}},3325:(e,t,r)=>{r.d(t,{D:()=>n,p:()=>i});const n={ajax:"ajax",jserrors:"jserrors",metrics:"metrics",pageAction:"page_action",pageViewEvent:"page_view_event",pageViewTiming:"page_view_timing",sessionReplay:"session_replay",sessionTrace:"session_trace",spa:"spa"},i={[n.pageViewEvent]:1,[n.pageViewTiming]:2,[n.metrics]:3,[n.jserrors]:4,[n.ajax]:5,[n.sessionTrace]:6,[n.pageAction]:7,[n.spa]:8,[n.sessionReplay]:9}}},n={};function i(e){var t=n[e];if(void 0!==t)return t.exports;var o=n[e]={exports:{}};return r[e](o,o.exports,i),o.exports}i.m=r,i.d=(e,t)=>{for(var r in t)i.o(t,r)&&!i.o(e,r)&&Object.defineProperty(e,r,{enumerable:!0,get:t[r]})},i.f={},i.e=e=>Promise.all(Object.keys(i.f).reduce(((t,r)=>(i.f[r](e,t),t)),[])),i.u=e=>(({78:"page_action-aggregate",147:"metrics-aggregate",242:"session-manager",317:"jserrors-aggregate",348:"page_view_timing-aggregate",412:"lazy-feature-loader",439:"async-api",538:"recorder",590:"session_replay-aggregate",675:"compressor",733:"session_trace-aggregate",786:"page_view_event-aggregate",873:"spa-aggregate",898:"ajax-aggregate"}[e]||e)+"."+{78:"ac76d497",147:"3dc53903",148:"1a20d5fe",242:"2a64278a",317:"49e41428",348:"bd6de33a",412:"2f55ce66",439:"30bd804e",538:"1b18459f",590:"cf0efb30",675:"ae9f91a8",733:"83105561",786:"06482edd",860:"03a8b7a5",873:"e6b09d52",898:"998ef92b"}[e]+"-1.236.0.min.js"),i.o=(e,t)=>Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(e,t),e={},t="NRBA:",i.l=(r,n,o,a)=>{if(e[r])e[r].push(n);else{var s,c;if(void 0!==o)for(var u=document.getElementsByTagName("script"),d=0;d {s.onerror=s.onload=null,clearTimeout(h);var i=e[r];if(delete e[r],s.parentNode&&s.parentNode.removeChild(s),i&&i.forEach((e=>e(n))),t)return t(n)},h=setTimeout(l.bind(null,void 0,{type:"timeout",target:s}),12e4);s.onerror=l.bind(null,s.onerror),s.onload=l.bind(null,s.onload),c&&document.head.appendChild(s)}},i.r=e=>{"undefined"!=typeof Symbol&&Symbol.toStringTag&&Object.defineProperty(e,Symbol.toStringTag,{value:"Module"}),Object.defineProperty(e,"__esModule",{value:!0})},i.j=364,i.p="https://js-agent.newrelic.com/",(()=>{var e={364:0,953:0};i.f.j=(t,r)=>{var n=i.o(e,t)?e[t]:void 0;if(0!==n)if(n)r.push(n[2]);else{var o=new Promise(((r,i)=>n=e[t]=[r,i]));r.push(n[2]=o);var a=i.p+i.u(t),s=new Error;i.l(a,(r=>{if(i.o(e,t)&&(0!==(n=e[t])&&(e[t]=void 0),n)){var o=r&&("load"===r.type?"missing":r.type),a=r&&r.target&&r.target.src;s.message="Loading chunk "+t+" failed.\n("+o+": "+a+")",s.name="ChunkLoadError",s.type=o,s.request=a,n[1](s)}}),"chunk-"+t,t)}};var t=(t,r)=>{var n,o,[a,s,c]=r,u=0;if(a.some((t=>0!==e[t]))){for(n in s)i.o(s,n)&&(i.m[n]=s[n]);if(c)c(i)}for(t&&t(r);u {i.r(o);var e=i(3325),t=i(5763);const r=Object.values(e.D);function n(e){const n={};return r.forEach((r=>{n[r]=function(e,r){return!1!==(0,t.Mt)(r,"".concat(e,".enabled"))}(r,e)})),n}var a=i(9144);var s=i(5546),c=i(385),u=i(8e3),d=i(5938),f=i(3960),l=i(50);class h extends d.W{constructor(e,t,r){let n=!(arguments.length>3&&void 0!==arguments[3])||arguments[3];super(e,t,r),this.auto=n,this.abortHandler,this.featAggregate,this.onAggregateImported,n&&(0,u.R)(e,r)}importAggregator(){let e=arguments.length>0&&void 0!==arguments[0]?arguments[0]:{};if(this.featAggregate||!this.auto)return;const r=c.il&&!0===(0,t.Mt)(this.agentIdentifier,"privacy.cookies_enabled");let n;this.onAggregateImported=new Promise((e=>{n=e}));const o=async()=>{let t;try{if(r){const{setupAgentSession:e}=await Promise.all([i.e(860),i.e(242)]).then(i.bind(i,3228));t=e(this.agentIdentifier)}}catch(e){(0,l.Z)("A problem occurred when starting up session manager. This page will not start or extend any session.",e)}try{if(!this.shouldImportAgg(this.featureName,t))return void(0,u.L)(this.agentIdentifier,this.featureName);const{lazyFeatureLoader:r}=await i.e(412).then(i.bind(i,8582)),{Aggregate:o}=await r(this.featureName,"aggregate");this.featAggregate=new o(this.agentIdentifier,this.aggregator,e),n(!0)}catch(e){(0,l.Z)("Downloading and initializing ".concat(this.featureName," failed..."),e),this.abortHandler?.(),n(!1)}};c.il?(0,f.b)((()=>o()),!0):o()}shouldImportAgg(r,n){return r!==e.D.sessionReplay||!1!==(0,t.Mt)(this.agentIdentifier,"session_trace.enabled")&&(!!n?.isNew||!!n?.state.sessionReplay)}}var g=i(7633),p=i(7894);class m extends h{static featureName=g.t9;constructor(r,n){let i=!(arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2];if(super(r,n,g.t9,i),("undefined"==typeof PerformanceNavigationTiming||c.Tt)&&"undefined"!=typeof PerformanceTiming){const n=(0,t.OP)(r);n[g.Dz]=Math.max(Date.now()-n.offset,0),(0,f.K)((()=>n[g.qw]=Math.max((0,p.z)()-n[g.Dz],0))),(0,f.b)((()=>{const t=(0,p.z)();n[g.OJ]=Math.max(t-n[g.Dz],0),(0,s.p)("timing",["load",t],void 0,e.D.pageViewTiming,this.ee)}))}this.importAggregator()}}var v=i(1117),b=i(1284);class y extends v.w{constructor(e){super(e),this.aggregatedData={}}store(e,t,r,n,i){var o=this.getBucket(e,t,r,i);return o.metrics=function(e,t){t||(t={count:0});return t.count+=1,(0,b.D)(e,(function(e,r){t[e]=w(r,t[e])})),t}(n,o.metrics),o}merge(e,t,r,n,i){var o=this.getBucket(e,t,n,i);if(o.metrics){var a=o.metrics;a.count+=r.count,(0,b.D)(r,(function(e,t){if("count"!==e){var n=a[e],i=r[e];i&&!i.c?a[e]=w(i.t,n):a[e]=function(e,t){if(!t)return e;t.c||(t=x(t.t));return t.min=Math.min(e.min,t.min),t.max=Math.max(e.max,t.max),t.t+=e.t,t.sos+=e.sos,t.c+=e.c,t}(i,a[e])}}))}else o.metrics=r}storeMetric(e,t,r,n){var i=this.getBucket(e,t,r);return i.stats=w(n,i.stats),i}getBucket(e,t,r,n){this.aggregatedData[e]||(this.aggregatedData[e]={});var i=this.aggregatedData[e][t];return i||(i=this.aggregatedData[e][t]={params:r||{}},n&&(i.custom=n)),i}get(e,t){return t?this.aggregatedData[e]&&this.aggregatedData[e][t]:this.aggregatedData[e]}take(e){for(var t={},r="",n=!1,i=0;i t.max&&(t.max=e),e 2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2];super(e,r,j.t,n),c.il&&((0,t.OP)(e).initHidden=Boolean("hidden"===document.visibilityState),(0,N.N)((()=>(0,s.p)("docHidden",[(0,p.z)()],void 0,j.t,this.ee)),!0),(0,O.bP)("pagehide",(()=>(0,s.p)("winPagehide",[(0,p.z)()],void 0,j.t,this.ee))),this.importAggregator())}}var P=i(3081);class C extends h{static featureName=P.t9;constructor(e,t){let r=!(arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2];super(e,t,P.t9,r),this.importAggregator()}}var R,I=i(2210),k=i(1214),H=i(2177),L={};try{R=localStorage.getItem("__nr_flags").split(","),console&&"function"==typeof console.log&&(L.console=!0,-1!==R.indexOf("dev")&&(L.dev=!0),-1!==R.indexOf("nr_dev")&&(L.nrDev=!0))}catch(e){}function z(e){try{L.console&&z(e)}catch(e){}}L.nrDev&&H.ee.on("internal-error",(function(e){z(e.stack)})),L.dev&&H.ee.on("fn-err",(function(e,t,r){z(r.stack)})),L.dev&&(z("NR AGENT IN DEVELOPMENT MODE"),z("flags: "+(0,b.D)(L,(function(e,t){return e})).join(", ")));var M=i(6660);class B extends h{static featureName=M.t;constructor(r,n){let i=!(arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2];super(r,n,M.t,i),this.skipNext=0;try{this.removeOnAbort=new AbortController}catch(e){}const o=this;o.ee.on("fn-start",(function(e,t,r){o.abortHandler&&(o.skipNext+=1)})),o.ee.on("fn-err",(function(t,r,n){o.abortHandler&&!n[M.A]&&((0,I.X)(n,M.A,(function(){return!0})),this.thrown=!0,(0,s.p)("err",[n,(0,p.z)()],void 0,e.D.jserrors,o.ee))})),o.ee.on("fn-end",(function(){o.abortHandler&&!this.thrown&&o.skipNext>0&&(o.skipNext-=1)})),o.ee.on("internal-error",(function(t){(0,s.p)("ierr",[t,(0,p.z)(),!0],void 0,e.D.jserrors,o.ee)})),this.origOnerror=c._A.onerror,c._A.onerror=this.onerrorHandler.bind(this),c._A.addEventListener("unhandledrejection",(t=>{const r=function(e){let t="Unhandled Promise Rejection: ";if(e instanceof Error)try{return e.message=t+e.message,e}catch(t){return e}if(void 0===e)return new Error(t);try{return new Error(t+(0,D.P)(e))}catch(e){return new Error(t)}}(t.reason);(0,s.p)("err",[r,(0,p.z)(),!1,{unhandledPromiseRejection:1}],void 0,e.D.jserrors,this.ee)}),(0,O.m$)(!1,this.removeOnAbort?.signal)),(0,k.gy)(this.ee),(0,k.BV)(this.ee),(0,k.em)(this.ee),(0,t.OP)(r).xhrWrappable&&(0,k.Kf)(this.ee),this.abortHandler=this.#e,this.importAggregator()}#e(){this.removeOnAbort?.abort(),this.abortHandler=void 0}onerrorHandler(t,r,n,i,o){"function"==typeof this.origOnerror&&this.origOnerror(...arguments);try{this.skipNext?this.skipNext-=1:(0,s.p)("err",[o||new F(t,r,n),(0,p.z)()],void 0,e.D.jserrors,this.ee)}catch(t){try{(0,s.p)("ierr",[t,(0,p.z)(),!0],void 0,e.D.jserrors,this.ee)}catch(e){}}return!1}}function F(e,t,r){this.message=e||"Uncaught error with no additional information",this.sourceURL=t,this.line=r}let U=1;const q="nr@id";function G(e){const t=typeof e;return!e||"object"!==t&&"function"!==t?-1:e===c._A?0:(0,I.X)(e,q,(function(){return U++}))}function V(e){if("string"==typeof e&&e.length)return e.length;if("object"==typeof e){if("undefined"!=typeof ArrayBuffer&&e instanceof ArrayBuffer&&e.byteLength)return e.byteLength;if("undefined"!=typeof Blob&&e instanceof Blob&&e.size)return e.size;if(!("undefined"!=typeof FormData&&e instanceof FormData))try{return(0,D.P)(e).length}catch(e){return}}}var X=i(7243);class W{constructor(e){this.agentIdentifier=e,this.generateTracePayload=this.generateTracePayload.bind(this),this.shouldGenerateTrace=this.shouldGenerateTrace.bind(this)}generateTracePayload(e){if(!this.shouldGenerateTrace(e))return null;var r=(0,t.DL)(this.agentIdentifier);if(!r)return null;var n=(r.accountID||"").toString()||null,i=(r.agentID||"").toString()||null,o=(r.trustKey||"").toString()||null;if(!n||!i)return null;var a=(0,_.M)(),s=(0,_.Ht)(),c=Date.now(),u={spanId:a,traceId:s,timestamp:c};return(e.sameOrigin||this.isAllowedOrigin(e)&&this.useTraceContextHeadersForCors())&&(u.traceContextParentHeader=this.generateTraceContextParentHeader(a,s),u.traceContextStateHeader=this.generateTraceContextStateHeader(a,c,n,i,o)),(e.sameOrigin&&!this.excludeNewrelicHeader()||!e.sameOrigin&&this.isAllowedOrigin(e)&&this.useNewrelicHeaderForCors())&&(u.newrelicHeader=this.generateTraceHeader(a,s,c,n,i,o)),u}generateTraceContextParentHeader(e,t){return"00-"+t+"-"+e+"-01"}generateTraceContextStateHeader(e,t,r,n,i){return i+"@nr=0-1-"+r+"-"+n+"-"+e+"----"+t}generateTraceHeader(e,t,r,n,i,o){if(!("function"==typeof c._A?.btoa))return null;var a={v:[0,1],d:{ty:"Browser",ac:n,ap:i,id:e,tr:t,ti:r}};return o&&n!==o&&(a.d.tk=o),btoa((0,D.P)(a))}shouldGenerateTrace(e){return this.isDtEnabled()&&this.isAllowedOrigin(e)}isAllowedOrigin(e){var r=!1,n={};if((0,t.Mt)(this.agentIdentifier,"distributed_tracing")&&(n=(0,t.P_)(this.agentIdentifier).distributed_tracing),e.sameOrigin)r=!0;else if(n.allowed_origins instanceof Array)for(var i=0;i 2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2];super(r,n,Z.t,i),(0,t.OP)(r).xhrWrappable&&(this.dt=new W(r),this.handler=(e,t,r,n)=>(0,s.p)(e,t,r,n,this.ee),(0,k.u5)(this.ee),(0,k.Kf)(this.ee),function(r,n,i,o){function a(e){var t=this;t.totalCbs=0,t.called=0,t.cbTime=0,t.end=E,t.ended=!1,t.xhrGuids={},t.lastSize=null,t.loadCaptureCalled=!1,t.params=this.params||{},t.metrics=this.metrics||{},e.addEventListener("load",(function(r){_(t,e)}),(0,O.m$)(!1)),c.IF||e.addEventListener("progress",(function(e){t.lastSize=e.loaded}),(0,O.m$)(!1))}function s(e){this.params={method:e[0]},T(this,e[1]),this.metrics={}}function u(e,n){var i=(0,t.DL)(r);i.xpid&&this.sameOrigin&&n.setRequestHeader("X-NewRelic-ID",i.xpid);var a=o.generateTracePayload(this.parsedOrigin);if(a){var s=!1;a.newrelicHeader&&(n.setRequestHeader("newrelic",a.newrelicHeader),s=!0),a.traceContextParentHeader&&(n.setRequestHeader("traceparent",a.traceContextParentHeader),a.traceContextStateHeader&&n.setRequestHeader("tracestate",a.traceContextStateHeader),s=!0),s&&(this.dt=a)}}function d(e,t){var r=this.metrics,i=e[0],o=this;if(r&&i){var a=V(i);a&&(r.txSize=a)}this.startTime=(0,p.z)(),this.listener=function(e){try{"abort"!==e.type||o.loadCaptureCalled||(o.params.aborted=!0),("load"!==e.type||o.called===o.totalCbs&&(o.onloadCalled||"function"!=typeof t.onload)&&"function"==typeof o.end)&&o.end(t)}catch(e){try{n.emit("internal-error",[e])}catch(e){}}};for(var s=0;s 1?e[1]=i:e.push(i)}else e[0]&&e[0].headers&&s(e[0].headers,n)&&(this.dt=n);function s(e,t){var r=!1;return t.newrelicHeader&&(e.set("newrelic",t.newrelicHeader),r=!0),t.traceContextParentHeader&&(e.set("traceparent",t.traceContextParentHeader),t.traceContextStateHeader&&e.set("tracestate",t.traceContextStateHeader),r=!0),r}}function x(e,t){this.params={},this.metrics={},this.startTime=(0,p.z)(),this.dt=t,e.length>=1&&(this.target=e[0]),e.length>=2&&(this.opts=e[1]);var r,n=this.opts||{},i=this.target;"string"==typeof i?r=i:"object"==typeof i&&i instanceof Y?r=i.url:c._A?.URL&&"object"==typeof i&&i instanceof URL&&(r=i.href),T(this,r);var o=(""+(i&&i instanceof Y&&i.method||n.method||"GET")).toUpperCase();this.params.method=o,this.txSize=V(n.body)||0}function A(t,r){var n;this.endTime=(0,p.z)(),this.params||(this.params={}),this.params.status=r?r.status:0,"string"==typeof this.rxSize&&this.rxSize.length>0&&(n=+this.rxSize);var o={txSize:this.txSize,rxSize:n,duration:(0,p.z)()-this.startTime};i("xhr",[this.params,o,this.startTime,this.endTime,"fetch"],this,e.D.ajax)}function E(t){var r=this.params,n=this.metrics;if(!this.ended){this.ended=!0;for(var o=0;o 2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2];super(e,t,we.t,r),this.importAggregator()}}new class{constructor(e){let t=arguments.length>1&&void 0!==arguments[1]?arguments[1]:(0,_.ky)(16);c._A?(this.agentIdentifier=t,this.sharedAggregator=new y({agentIdentifier:this.agentIdentifier}),this.features={},this.desiredFeatures=new Set(e.features||[]),this.desiredFeatures.add(m),Object.assign(this,(0,a.j)(this.agentIdentifier,e,e.loaderType||"agent")),this.start()):(0,l.Z)("Failed to initial the agent. Could not determine the runtime environment.")}get config(){return{info:(0,t.C5)(this.agentIdentifier),init:(0,t.P_)(this.agentIdentifier),loader_config:(0,t.DL)(this.agentIdentifier),runtime:(0,t.OP)(this.agentIdentifier)}}start(){const t="features";try{const r=n(this.agentIdentifier),i=[...this.desiredFeatures];i.sort(((t,r)=>e.p[t.featureName]-e.p[r.featureName])),i.forEach((t=>{if(r[t.featureName]||t.featureName===e.D.pageViewEvent){const n=function(t){switch(t){case e.D.ajax:return[e.D.jserrors];case e.D.sessionTrace:return[e.D.ajax,e.D.pageViewEvent];case e.D.sessionReplay:return[e.D.sessionTrace];case e.D.pageViewTiming:return[e.D.pageViewEvent];default:return[]}}(t.featureName);n.every((e=>r[e]))||(0,l.Z)("".concat(t.featureName," is enabled but one or more dependent features has been disabled (").concat((0,D.P)(n),"). This may cause unintended consequences or missing data...")),this.features[t.featureName]=new t(this.agentIdentifier,this.sharedAggregator)}})),(0,T.Qy)(this.agentIdentifier,this.features,t)}catch(e){(0,l.Z)("Failed to initialize all enabled instrument classes (agent aborted) -",e);for(const e in this.features)this.features[e].abortHandler?.();const r=(0,T.fP)();return delete r.initializedAgents[this.agentIdentifier]?.api,delete r.initializedAgents[this.agentIdentifier]?.[t],delete this.sharedAggregator,r.ee?.abort(),delete r.ee?.get(this.agentIdentifier),!1}}}({features:[J,m,S,class extends h{static featureName=oe;constructor(t,r){if(super(t,r,oe,!(arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2]),!c.il)return;const n=this.ee;let i;(0,k.QU)(n),this.eventsEE=(0,k.em)(n),this.eventsEE.on(se,(function(e,t){this.bstStart=(0,p.z)()})),this.eventsEE.on(ae,(function(t,r){(0,s.p)("bst",[t[0],r,this.bstStart,(0,p.z)()],void 0,e.D.sessionTrace,n)})),n.on(ce+ne,(function(e){this.time=(0,p.z)(),this.startPath=location.pathname+location.hash})),n.on(ce+ie,(function(t){(0,s.p)("bstHist",[location.pathname+location.hash,this.startPath,this.time],void 0,e.D.sessionTrace,n)}));try{i=new PerformanceObserver((t=>{const r=t.getEntries();(0,s.p)(te,[r],void 0,e.D.sessionTrace,n)})),i.observe({type:re,buffered:!0})}catch(e){}this.importAggregator({resourceObserver:i})}},C,xe,B,class extends h{static featureName=de;constructor(e,r){if(super(e,r,de,!(arguments.length>2&&void 0!==arguments[2])||arguments[2]),!c.il)return;if(!(0,t.OP)(e).xhrWrappable)return;try{this.removeOnAbort=new AbortController}catch(e){}let n,i=0;const o=this.ee.get("tracer"),a=(0,k._L)(this.ee),s=(0,k.Lg)(this.ee),u=(0,k.BV)(this.ee),d=(0,k.Kf)(this.ee),f=this.ee.get("events"),l=(0,k.u5)(this.ee),h=(0,k.QU)(this.ee),g=(0,k.Gm)(this.ee);function m(e,t){h.emit("newURL",[""+window.location,t])}function v(){i++,n=window.location.hash,this[ve]=(0,p.z)()}function b(){i--,window.location.hash!==n&&m(0,!0);var e=(0,p.z)();this[pe]=~~this[pe]+e-this[ve],this[ye]=e}function y(e,t){e.on(t,(function(){this[t]=(0,p.z)()}))}this.ee.on(ve,v),s.on(be,v),a.on(be,v),this.ee.on(ye,b),s.on(ge,b),a.on(ge,b),this.ee.buffer([ve,ye,"xhr-resolved"],this.featureName),f.buffer([ve],this.featureName),u.buffer(["setTimeout"+le,"clearTimeout"+fe,ve],this.featureName),d.buffer([ve,"new-xhr","send-xhr"+fe],this.featureName),l.buffer([me+fe,me+"-done",me+he+fe,me+he+le],this.featureName),h.buffer(["newURL"],this.featureName),g.buffer([ve],this.featureName),s.buffer(["propagate",be,ge,"executor-err","resolve"+fe],this.featureName),o.buffer([ve,"no-"+ve],this.featureName),a.buffer(["new-jsonp","cb-start","jsonp-error","jsonp-end"],this.featureName),y(l,me+fe),y(l,me+"-done"),y(a,"new-jsonp"),y(a,"jsonp-end"),y(a,"cb-start"),h.on("pushState-end",m),h.on("replaceState-end",m),window.addEventListener("hashchange",m,(0,O.m$)(!0,this.removeOnAbort?.signal)),window.addEventListener("load",m,(0,O.m$)(!0,this.removeOnAbort?.signal)),window.addEventListener("popstate",(function(){m(0,i>1)}),(0,O.m$)(!0,this.removeOnAbort?.signal)),this.abortHandler=this.#e,this.importAggregator()}#e(){this.removeOnAbort?.abort(),this.abortHandler=void 0}}],loaderType:"spa"})})(),window.NRBA=o})(); window.jQuery || document.write(' ') CKEDITOR_BASEPATH='https://f1000research.com/js/vendor/ckeditor/' window.reactTheme = 'research'; window.MathJax = { CommonHTML: { linebreaks: { automatic: true } }, 'HTML-CSS': { linebreaks: { automatic: true } }, SVG: { linebreaks: { automatic: true } }, AuthorInit: function() { MathJax.Hub.Register.MessageHook('End Process', function () { let timeout = false; // holder for timeout id const delay = 250; // delay after event is "complete" to run callback const reflowMath = function() { const dispFormulas = document.querySelectorAll('.disp-formula.panel'); if (!dispFormulas) { return; } for (const dispFormula of dispFormulas) { const child = dispFormula.querySelector('.MathJax_Preview').nextSibling.firstChild; const isMultiline = MathJax.Hub.getAllJax(dispFormula)[0].root.isMultiline; if (dispFormula.offsetWidth < child.offsetWidth || isMultiline) { MathJax.Hub.Queue(['Rerender', MathJax.Hub, dispFormula]); } } }; window.addEventListener('resize', function() { clearTimeout(timeout); // clear the timeout timeout = setTimeout(reflowMath, delay); // start timing for event "completion" }); }); }, }; if (window.location.hash == '#_=_'){ window.location = window.location.href.split('#')[0] } !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s){if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function() {n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)} ;if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n; n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0';n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0];s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,'script','https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js'); fbq('init', '1641728616063202'); fbq('track', "PixelInitialized", {}); (function(h,o,t,j,a,r){ h.hj=h.hj||function(){(h.hj.q=h.hj.q||[]).push(arguments)}; h._hjSettings={hjid:2318163,hjsv:6}; a=o.getElementsByTagName('head')[0]; r=o.createElement('script');r.async=1; r.src=t+h._hjSettings.hjid+j+h._hjSettings.hjsv; a.appendChild(r); })(window,document,'https://static.hotjar.com/c/hotjar-','.js?sv='); search file_upload Submit your research search menu close search Browse Gateways & Collections How to Publish Submit your Research My Submissions Article Guidelines Article Guidelines (New Versions) Open Data, Software and Code Guidelines Open Data and Accessible Source Materials Guidelines (HSS) Open Data, Software and Code Guidelines (PSE) Prepublication Checks Production Process Posters and Slides Guidelines Document Guidelines Article Processing Charges Peer Review Finding Article Reviewers About How it Works For Reviewers Our Advisors Policies Glossary FAQs For Developers Newsroom Contact My Research Submissions Content and Tracking Alerts My Details Sign In file_upload Submit your research { "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "ScholarlyArticle", "mainEntityOfPage": { "@type": "WebPage", "@id": "https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238" }, "headline": "Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease?", "datePublished": "2024-10-16T12:28:09", "dateModified": "2025-02-06T16:13:50", "author": [ { "@type": "Person", "name": "Mohammad Helmi" }, { "@type": "Person", "name": "Eman AlJoghaiman" } ], "publisher": { "@type": "Organization", "name": "F1000Research", "logo": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "https://f1000research.com/img/AMP/F1000Research_image.png", "height": 480, "width": 60 } }, "image": { "@type": "ImageObject", "url": "https://f1000research.com/img/AMP/F1000Research_image.png", "height": 1200, "width": 150 }, "description": " Background Hormonal changes in pregnancy and their induced effect on periodontal health are well documented. The present study is aimed at the potential repercussions of multiple pregnancies on periodontal health. Materials and methods Our study utilized data from key sections of the NHANES. All the pertaining and relevant data for the study is collected. Our exposure variable was the number of pregnancies, and the outcome variable was periodontal disease. The number of pregnancies is classified as one, two, three, four, or more. Age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, poverty/income ratio, marital status, and other variables. Multiple logistic regression models were employed to assess the impact of multiple pregnancies on periodontal disease. Result The crude and multiple logistic regression analyses revealed that none of the variables were significantly associated with the prevalence of periodontitis. In univariate analysis, patients with one or two pregnancies had higher odds of experiencing periodontitis (OR 1.154, 95% CI 0.748-1.779), (OR 1.464, 95% CI 0.864-2.483) respectively. However, these associations did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion Within the limitation of the study, there is no significant relationship between parity and the prevalence of periodontitis, the longitudinal study may be warranted to delve deeper into any potential associations. " } { "@context": "http://schema.org", "@type": "BreadcrumbList", "itemListElement": [ { "@type": "ListItem", "position": "1", "item": { "@id": "https://f1000research.com/", "name": "Home" } }, { "@type": "ListItem", "position": "2", "item": { "@id": "https://f1000research.com/browse/articles", "name": "Browse" } }, { "@type": "ListItem", "position": "3", "item": { "@id": "https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2", "name": "Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease?" } } ] } Home Browse Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? ALL Metrics - Views Downloads Get PDF Get XML Cite How to cite this article Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E. Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.2 ) NOTE: If applicable, it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. Close Copy Citation Details Export Export Citation Sciwheel EndNote Ref. Manager Bibtex ProCite Sente EXPORT Select a format first Track Share ▬ ✚ Research Article Revised Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] Mohammad Helmi https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3125-1091 1 , Eman AlJoghaiman https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9504-0931 2 Mohammad Helmi https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3125-1091 1 , Eman AlJoghaiman https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9504-0931 2 PUBLISHED 06 Feb 2025 Author details Author details 1 Department of Periodontics and Community Dentistry, King Saud University, Riyadh, Riyadh Province, Saudi Arabia 2 Department of Preventive Dental Science, College of Dentistry, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia Mohammad Helmi Roles: Data Curation, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Software, Writing – Original Draft Preparation, Writing – Review & Editing Eman AlJoghaiman Roles: Conceptualization, Data Curation, Formal Analysis, Resources, Software, Supervision, Writing – Original Draft Preparation, Writing – Review & Editing OPEN PEER REVIEW DETAILS REVIEWER STATUS Abstract Background Hormonal changes in pregnancy and their induced effect on periodontal health are well documented. The present study is aimed at the potential repercussions of multiple pregnancies on periodontal health. Materials and methods Our study utilized data from key sections of the NHANES. All the pertaining and relevant data for the study is collected. Our exposure variable was the number of pregnancies, and the outcome variable was periodontal disease. The number of pregnancies is classified as one, two, three, four, or more. Age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, poverty/income ratio, marital status, and other variables. Multiple logistic regression models were employed to assess the impact of multiple pregnancies on periodontal disease. Result The crude and multiple logistic regression analyses revealed that none of the variables were significantly associated with the prevalence of periodontitis. In univariate analysis, patients with one or two pregnancies had higher odds of experiencing periodontitis (OR 1.154, 95% CI 0.748-1.779), (OR 1.464, 95% CI 0.864-2.483) respectively. However, these associations did not reach statistical significance. Conclusion Within the limitation of the study, there is no significant relationship between parity and the prevalence of periodontitis, the longitudinal study may be warranted to delve deeper into any potential associations. READ ALL READ LESS Keywords Parity; Multiple Pregnancy; Periodontal Disease; NHANES Corresponding Author(s) Eman AlJoghaiman ( [email protected] ) Close Corresponding author: Eman AlJoghaiman Competing interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Grant information: The author(s) declared that no grants were involved in supporting this work. Copyright: © 2025 Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. How to cite: Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E. Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.2 ) First published: 16 Oct 2024, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.1 ) Latest published: 06 Feb 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.2 ) Revised Amendments from Version 1 The Introduction has been revised for better readability and to provide clearer context on the study's rationale. Updates have been made to the Methods section to clarify the definition of the exposure variable, as suggested by the reviewers. The Results section has been refined to improve clarity and presentation based on reviewer feedback. The Discussion now includes additional limitations, specifically addressing the impact of categorizing pregnancy as a variable and the exclusion of edentulous participants. The Introduction has been revised for better readability and to provide clearer context on the study's rationale. Updates have been made to the Methods section to clarify the definition of the exposure variable, as suggested by the reviewers. The Results section has been refined to improve clarity and presentation based on reviewer feedback. The Discussion now includes additional limitations, specifically addressing the impact of categorizing pregnancy as a variable and the exclusion of edentulous participants. See the authors' detailed response to the review by Nancy Ajwa See the authors' detailed response to the review by Dr. Talal Shihayb READ REVIEWER RESPONSES Introduction Periodontal diseases are influenced by a variety of factors. 1 This prevalent oral condition is initiated by the accumulation of dental biofilm and is further exacerbated by various local and systemic elements. 2 Notably, hormonal factors play a significant role in impacting periodontal health. 3 Fluctuations in progesterone and estrogen levels during different life stages, including puberty, pregnancy, and menopause, have been identified as contributors to adverse effects on periodontal health. 4 The hormonal influence leads to gingival changes that worsen pre-existing dental biofilm-induced gingivitis. Moreover, the absence of estrogen, without the presence of dental biofilm, can result in desquamative changes in the gingiva, representing the other end of the hormonal spectrum. 5 During the transitional phases between puberty and menopause, the nine-month duration of pregnancy introduces alterations to periodontal health, manifesting as both localized and generalized changes in the gingiva. Localized changes are characterized by the presence of a pregnancy tumor, while generalized changes manifest as an overall enlargement of the gingiva. 6 This period is associated with heightened inflammation of the gingival tissues, commonly known as pregnancy gingivitis. Symptoms include redness, tenderness, and swelling of the gingiva, accompanied by spontaneous bleeding or bleeding during routine activities such as tooth brushing or eating. 7 Typically commencing in the second month of pregnancy, these changes can peak in severity during the third trimester. 8 The pathogenesis of altered periodontal health during pregnancy involves a combination of factors. 4 Studying multiple pregnancies, as opposed to single pregnancies, is critical because cumulative gestational exposure to hormonal fluctuations and immune adaptations may exacerbate oral inflammatory responses, potentially amplifying periodontal vulnerability over successive pregnancies. A key aspect is the rise in levels of hormones such as oestradiol, oestriol, and notably, progesterone. These hormones play a central role in modifying the host immune-inflammatory response to oral bacteria. Specifically, Prevotella intermedia, a Bacteroides species thriving on estrogen and progesterone, experiences a significant increase during pregnancy, serving as a primary bacterial factor. 9 Furthermore, these hormones exhibit specific receptors on gingival fibroblasts and epithelial cells, influencing gingival changes. Additionally, they act on endothelial cells, increasing vascular permeability and contributing to the overall alterations observed in the gingiva during pregnancy. 10 This intricate interplay underscores the multifaceted nature of periodontal health dynamics in the context of pregnancy. Progesterone emerges as the key hormone driving these changes, yet estrogen also plays a significant role in inducing vascular changes. 11 Simultaneously, deficiencies in host inflammatory cells, particularly in neutrophil chemotaxis, contribute to the adverse aspects of periodontal health. Significantly, vitamin D deficiency is a prevalent concern in the pregnant population, as highlighted in various publications. 12 The role of vitamin D in periodontitis is well-documented. The susceptibility to oxidative stress increases during pregnancy due to heightened metabolic demands and increased tissue oxygen requirements, a factor strongly implicated in the inflammatory process. 13 Additionally, the presence of gestational diabetes may further disrupt host defense mechanisms, altering the delicate balance between health and disease. 14 The intricate interplay of these hormonal, nutritional, and metabolic factors underscores the complexity of periodontal health dynamics during pregnancy. While numerous studies have delved into the connection between pregnancy and periodontal disease, there is a scarcity of research exploring the impact of multiple pregnancies on the increased risk of periodontal issues. 15 , 16 Given the tissue changes occurring with each pregnancy and the cumulative effect of repeated exposure in subsequent pregnancies, there is a hypothetical expectation of a deteriorating impact on periodontal health. 4 Therefore, understanding the potential repercussions of multiple pregnancies on periodontal health holds significant importance for both expectant mothers and healthcare professionals. By acknowledging this potential correlation, healthcare providers can underscore the importance of maintaining good oral hygiene practices and seeking appropriate dental care during pregnancy to mitigate any possible risks. In this context, an effort has been made to investigate the relationship between multiple pregnancies and periodontal health. This exploration aims to enhance our comprehension of potential risks and preventive measures associated with periodontal disease in individuals experiencing multiple pregnancies. Such knowledge can serve as a guide for healthcare professionals, enabling them to offer pertinent advice, facilitate early detection, and provide timely interventions to support optimal periodontal health outcomes in pregnant women. Existing evidence on parity and periodontal disease derives largely from high-income settings, with limited data from regions like [low-income countries], where higher fertility rates and disparities in oral healthcare access may uniquely shape risk trajectories. This study addresses this gap by examining the relationship in a population with demographics, offering insights critical to tailored prevention strategies. Methods Study design and population The National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) is a comprehensive, cross-sectional survey conducted in the United States, aiming to provide a nationally representative overview of non-institutionalized individuals living in households. Participants in this survey undergo a series of assessments, including the completion of a questionnaire, medical and dental examinations, and various laboratory tests. The protocols for collecting oral health data in the NHANES 2011–2012 and NHANES 2013–2014 cycles were approved by the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention National Centre for Health Statistics Research Ethics Review Board. Written informed consent was secured from all survey participants. Our study utilized data from key sections of the NHANES, including demographic information, examination results, questionnaire responses, and limited access data. The focus was on individuals aged 18 years and older who underwent a dental examination, with exclusion criteria in place to remove edentulous subjects from our analysis, we ensure a thorough and targeted evaluation of oral health within a diverse and nationally representative sample of the U.S. population. In this study, pregnancy exposure is operationalized as completed pregnancies (live births or stillbirths), excluding miscarriages or terminations, to align with parity metrics commonly used in population health research. Variable of interest Exposure variable Number of pregnancies Outcome variable Periodontal disease For this investigation, we used the NHANES complete periodontal examination data to calculate periodontal disease indices using Eke et al. definition of periodontal disease 17 ). According to this definition, periodontal disease was classified as follows: Severe periodontitis: ≥2 interproximal sites with loss of attachment (LOA) ≥6 mm (not on the same tooth) and ≥1 interproximal site with probing depth (PD) ≥5 mm; Moderate periodontitis: ≥2 interproximal sites with LOA ≥4 mm (not on same tooth), or ≥2 interproximal sites with PD ≥5 mm (not on same tooth); Mild periodontitis: ≥2 interproximal sites with LOA ≥3 mm, and ≥2 interproximal sites with PD ≥4 mm (not on same tooth) or one site with PD ≥5 mm and finally, no periodontitis group whose has no evidence of mild, moderate, or severe periodontitis. 18 Covariate variable To ensure a comprehensive examination and control for any factors that might influence the outcome, our analysis includes a range of covariates. These covariates serve the crucial purpose of minimizing the impact of potential confounders, allowing us to scrutinize the relationship between the exposure and outcome with greater precision. The diverse set of covariates comprises age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, poverty/income ratio, marital status, occupation, alcohol consumption, dental insurance coverage, dental visit frequency, and body mass index (BMI). Age is categorized into six groups: (18-30), (31-40), (41-50), (51-60), and over 60 years. Gender is identified as either female or male. Race and ethnicity are classified as non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, Mexican American and other Hispanic, and non-Hispanic Asian. Poverty indices are categorized into low, middle, and high. Marital status is delineated as yes or no. Occupation is categorized as working and non-working. Dental visits are categorized as regular and not regular. Dental insurance coverage is classified as yes or no. The number of pregnancies is classified as one, two, three, four, or more. Lastly, education level is categorized as less than high school, high school, and college graduate or above. By meticulously examining and accounting for these covariates, we aim to obtain results that are closer to the true relationship between the exposure and outcome, free from the confounding effects of other variables. Statistical analysis The data were obtained by consolidating demographic, health questionnaire, clinical examination, and limited access data from NHANES (2011–2012) with corresponding files from NHANES (2013–2014). To ensure unbiased point estimates and accurate variance estimation, considering the complex sampling design of NHANES, we applied proper sampling weights and utilized a licensed version of SAS survey procedures, following the recommendations of the National Centre for Health Statistics and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention. An analysis of the demographics and disease status of the study population was conducted using the Rao-Scott chi-squared test. Additionally, both simple and multiple logistic regression models were employed to assess the impact of multiple pregnancies on periodontal disease. The multiple regression model included age, sex, race, income, and education level as explanatory variables. The selection of these potential confounders was based on either current literature evidence or their association with insurance and dental care utilization variables observed in bivariate analysis. In SPSS, discrete missing values were assigned by designating '999' in the primary text box while leaving subsequent fields blank; once applied, this value was labeled to explicitly identify missing data entries in the dataset. The significance level was set at p ≤ 0.05. Results Summary of the results Table 1 presents the demographic characteristics of the study subjects, including weighted percentages. Among the 2128 subjects, more than one-quarter were aged over 60 years [insert specific age], 42.9% identified as non-Hispanic white, 34.6% had a high household level, and over half had either an associate or college degree. The majority of subjects had some form of health insurance and had visited the dentist within the 12 months preceding the survey. Table 1. Demographic characteristics of the study subjects (n=2128). Total (n) Percentage % a Age 18-30 years 482 22.7 31-40 years 327 15.4 41-50 years 347 16.3 51-60 years 357 16.8 More than 60 years 615 28.9 Race/ethnicity Mexican American 296 13.9 Other Hispanic 181 8.5 Non-Hispanic White 913 42.9 Non-Hispanic Black 426 20.0 Other Races Including Multi-Racial 312 14.7 Household income Below Poverty Line 644 30.3 Near Poverty 181 8.5 Low-Income 324 15.2 Middle-Income 242 11.4 High-Income 737 34.6 Education level Less than High School 408 19.2 High School Level 450 21.1 AA or College Degree 1157 54.4 Weight status (Based on BMI) Underweight 595 28.0 Normal 564 26.5 Overweight 459 21.6 Obese 510 24.0 Alcohol consumption status Non-drinker 1363 64.1 Drinker 765 35.9 Diabetes Present 177 8.3 Not present 1951 91.7 Periodontal disease Severe 2 0.1 Moderate 45 2.1 Mild 172 8.1 Not present 1909 89.7 Time of most recent dental visit Less than 1 year 1333 62.6 1-2 years 388 18.2 More than 2 years 407 19.1 Insurance coverage Yes 1500 81.53 No 516 18.47 Pregnancy Not pregnant 827 38.9 One 161 7.6 Two 323 15.2 Three 295 13.9 Four 229 10.8 More than 4 293 13.8 a Weighted row percentages. Effect of sociodemographic factors on the prevalence of periodontitis The subjects were categorized based on the severity of periodontitis, dividing them into groups of no, mild, moderate, and severe periodontitis (refer to Tables 2 and 3 ). The prevalence of periodontitis exhibited a significant difference primarily based on the subjects’ age. Subjects in older age brackets were consistently more likely to have some form of periodontitis compared to their younger counterparts. Additionally, the prevalence of periodontitis on average was higher among pregnant subjects compared to those who were not pregnant. Table 2. Subject demographics and demographic predictors of periodontics in study subjects (n=2128). Total (n) No periodontitis % Mild periodontitis % Moderate periodontitis % Severe periodontitis % P -value Age 18-30 482 91.3% 0.4% 1.5% 6.8% 0.043 * 31-40 327 90.5% 0.0% 1.8% 7.6% 41-50 347 90.8% 0.0% 2.0% 7.2% 51-60 357 86.0% 0.0% 1.7% 12.3% More than 60 years 615 89.6% 0.0% 3.1% 7.3% Race/ethnicity Mexican American 296 90.5% 0.0% 2.7% 6.8% 0.835 Other Hispanic 181 89.0% 0.6% 2.2% 8.3% Non-Hispanic White 913 89.5% 0.1% 2.1% 8.3% Non-Hispanic Black 426 89.0% 0.0% 2.1% 8.9% Other Races Including Multi-Racial 312 91.0% 0.0% 1.6% 7.4% Household income Below Poverty Line 644 87.9% 0.2% 2.0% 9.9% 0.830 Near Poverty 181 90.1% 0.0% 2.2% 7.7% Low-Income 324 91.4% 0.0% 2.5% 6.2% Middle-Income 242 89.7% 0.0% 2.9% 7.4% High-Income 737 90.5% 0.1% 1.8% 7.6% Education level Less than High School 408 90.9% 0.2% 1.7% 7.1% 0.842 High School Level 450 89.3% 0.0% 1.8% 8.9% AA or College Degree 1157 89.2% 0.1% 2.5% 8.2% Pregnancy Not Pregnant 827 90.7% 0.0% 1.5% 7.9% 0.392 One 161 87.0% 0.0% 3.1% 9.9% Two 323 89.5% 0.3% 1.9% 8.4% Three 295 90.8% 0.3% 2.0% 6.8% Four 229 88.6% 0.0% 4.4% 7.0% More than 4 293 88.4% 0.0% 2.0% 9.6% a Weighted row percentages. * Statistically Significant at 0.05. Table 3. Subject characteristics and health-related predictors of periodontitis among study subjects (n=2128). Total (n) No periodontitis % Mild periodontitis % Moderate periodontitis % Severe periodontitis % P -value Alcohol consumption status Non-drinker 1363 88.9% 0.1% 2.1% 9.0% 0.258 Drinker 765 91.1% 0.1% 2.2% 6.5% Weight status (Based on BMI) Underweight 595 88.6% .2% 1.7% 9.6% 0.358 Normal 564 88.5% 0.0% 2.3% 9.2% Overweight 459 90.8% 0.0% 2.8% 6.3% Obese 510 91.4% 0.2% 1.8% 6.7% Diabetes Present 177 87.0% 0.0% 3.4% 9.6% 0.498 Not present 1951 90.0% 0.1% 2.0% 7.9% Education level Less than High School 408 90.9% 0.2% 1.7% 7.1% 0.842 High School Level 450 89.3% 0.0% 1.8% 8.9% a Weighted row percentages. Effect of health insurance, dental care utilization, and periodontal disease status on the prevalence of periodontics among study subjects In Table 4 , approximately 9.4% of subjects with health insurance and 9.2% of subjects without health insurance exhibited some form of periodontitis. Analyzing periodontitis concerning the time elapsed since the last dental visit, we observed that 11% of subjects who had a dental visit within 12 months prior to the survey had periodontitis. For those with a dental visit more than 12 months but less than 24 months prior, 8.5% had periodontitis, and 9.8% of those with their most recent dental visit more than 2 years before the survey had periodontitis. Table 4. Distribution of periodontitis per dental visits, insurance coverage, occupation, and, marital status among study subjects. Total (n=2128) No periodontitis % Mild periodontitis % Moderate periodontitis % Severe periodontitis % P -value Time of most recent dental visit Less than 1 year 1333 89.0% 0.2% 2.4% 8.4% 0.354 1-2 years 388 91.5% 0.0% 2.3% 6.2% More than 2 years 407 90.2% 0.0% 1.0% 8.8% Insurance Yes 1500 90.5% 0.0% 1.8% 7.6% 0.532 No 516 90.8% 0.0% 2.0% 7.2% Occupation Working 1134 90.2% .1% 1.9% 7.8% 0.793 Not Working 994 89.1% .1% 2.4% 8.4% Marital Status Married 1495 89.7% 0.0% 2.4% 7.9% 0.169 Not Married 520 89.2% 0.4% 1.5% 8.8% a Weighted row percentages. Both crude and multiple logistic regression analyses revealed that none of the variables were significantly associated with the prevalence of periodontitis. In univariate analysis, patients with one and two pregnancies had higher odds of experiencing periodontitis (OR 1.46, 95% CI 0.864-2.483), (OR 1.15, 95% CI 0.748-1.779) respectively. However, these associations did not reach statistical significance (p > 0.05). Patients with dental visits in the 1-2 year range had greater odds (OR 1.13, 95% CI 0.772-1.651) of having periodontitis, but this association was not statistically significant (p > 0.05) (see Table 5 ). Table 5. Adjusted and Unadjusted Odds Ratio using Logistics Regression Analysis. Variable Unadjusted OR (95% CI) Adjusted OR (95% CI) Number of pregnancies Not Pregnant Ref Ref One 0.78(0.51-1.199) 1.46(0.864-2.483) Two 1.14(0.639-2.044) 1.15(0.748-1.779) Three 0.90(0.541-1.484) 0.95(0.588-1.521) Four 0.78(0.45-1.308) 1.08(0.652-1.78) More than 4 0.98(0.567-1.679) 1.22(0.788-1.897) Dental Visit Less than one year Ref Ref 1-2 years 0.76(0.509-1.123) 1.13(0.772-1.651) More than 2 years 0.89(0.613-1.281) 0.91(0.558-1.489) Insurance No Ref Ref Yes 1.23(0.871-1.733) 1.21(0.859-1.713) Discussion The primary aim of this study is to investigate the association between multiple pregnancies and the severity of periodontal disease/periodontitis. According to the study results, there was no discernible difference in the prevalence of periodontitis between individuals with single pregnancies and those with multiple pregnancies. However, it was noted that the prevalence of periodontitis was higher in pregnant individuals compared to non-pregnant ones. The study findings also indicated that patients with two pregnancies had higher odds of experiencing periodontitis than those with only one pregnancy, although this difference did not reach statistical significance. Both unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios for the number of pregnancies suggested higher odds of periodontitis during pregnancy. The findings of the current study align with earlier reported research. 19 , 20 Previous studies indicated higher gingival index and periodontal probing depth among women with prior pregnancies compared to primigravida. However, after adjusting for factors such as age, socio-economic status, education, and other associated risk factors, no correlation was identified. Nevertheless, some studies have demonstrated a significant association between increased gingival scores and periodontal probing depth in women with multiple pregnancies compared to those with a single pregnancy. 21 Additionally, research has shown heightened gingival inflammation and increased periodontal probing depth during pregnancy. 22 – 24 Piscoya et al. conducted a study exploring various factors, including the number of pregnancies and the prevalence of periodontitis. Their findings, organized in a hierarchy, revealed that schooling, family income, body mass index, and bacterial plaque were associated with the prevalence of periodontitis, but not with multiple pregnancies. 20 Another study concluded that, in addition to other factors, pregnant women with two or more previous births [multigravidae] exhibited significantly higher gingival index and periodontal probing depth scores compared to those with one previous birth. However, the increased gingival index and periodontal probing depth in multigravidae might be attributed to untreated gingival or periodontal disease from the first pregnancy persisting during subsequent pregnancies. Furthermore, factors such as low socio-economic status and lower educational levels could contribute to negligence of oral hygiene, leading to an increased prevalence of periodontitis. 21 The variations in study findings may be attributed to several factors. Multiparous women typically tend to be older than prima gravida women, leading to a longer cumulative exposure to etiological agents of disease. Additionally, the absence of treatment during or between pregnancies results in untreated periodontal disease persisting into subsequent pregnancies. 21 Multiparous women, especially those with young children, may prioritize other systemic health conditions, diverting attention, time, energy, and finances away from personal dental care. This tendency can result in neglected oral care, increased plaque accumulation, and a higher prevalence of gingival conditions. 19 Therefore, the observed higher gingival index and probing depth in multiparous women may be more related to sociodemographic backgrounds than to a true association with parity. It is widely recognized that existing periodontal disease is exacerbated during pregnancy, and pregnancy itself does not directly cause gingival or periodontal disease. Pregnancy-associated physiological changes can superimpose gingival inflammation on pre-existing dental plaque accumulation. If oral health is well-maintained with the absence of gingival inflammation before pregnancy, the condition of pregnancy itself may not induce gingivitis or periodontitis. Notably, existing studies have not taken into account pre-pregnancy gingival inflammation and treatment for the periodontal condition, which could influence the study outcomes. 20 Hormonal alterations during pregnancy contribute to an increase in specific periodontal pathogens, such as Prevotella intermedia, which utilizes elevated hormone levels as a nutrient. Physiological microvascular changes observed in pregnancy, coupled with exposure to altered dental biofilm, may exacerbate pre-existing gingival conditions. The surge in estrogen levels, particularly progesterone, reaches a 20-fold increase, leading to changes in vascular permeability that cause gingival swelling and elevated crevicular fluid levels. 25 The heightened production of prostaglandins, in addition to the vascular burden, may intensify gingival inflammation, result in the loss of keratinization of gingival epithelium, and foster fibroblast proliferation. Furthermore, the altered host response is characterized by decreased chemotaxis and phagocytic capacity of neutrophils, along with the down-regulation of IL-6 production. This exposes the gingival tissue to microbial attack, resulting in increased gingival inflammation. 26 Gestational diabetes compounds the detrimental effects on host immunity, fostering the proliferation of pathogenic microflora and increasing the risk of periodontal disease. 25 Repeated exposure to these events during multiple pregnancies is anticipated to lead to heightened periodontal destruction. However, it has been observed that postpartum, there is a substantial decrease in gingival inflammation, and gingival health is often restored to the pre-pregnancy state. 27 Furthermore, the experiences of gingival disease during previous pregnancies may prompt individuals to undergo periodontal treatment, contributing to the restoration of gingival health. 28 This could explain the absence of a significant difference in periodontitis among individuals with one pregnancy and those with multiple pregnancies in the present study. There are several limitations to our study. Notably, the exacerbation of existing periodontal conditions during pregnancy is a well-known phenomenon. Unfortunately, our study lacked data on the status of gingival inflammation before pregnancy, which could have influenced the study outcomes. Additionally, being a retrospective cross-sectional study, our investigation relied on data from a study not specifically designed to address our hypothesis, potentially introducing clinical variations in the disease process. The utilization of dental care after the first pregnancy was not explored, and if a significant number of individuals underwent periodontal treatment after the initial pregnancy and before subsequent pregnancies, it might impact the outcomes. While a standardized protocol was followed for the diagnosis of periodontal disease, there remains a possibility of misclassification, albeit likely to be non-differential. Periodontal status was assessed only at the baseline survey, and changes over follow-up were not considered. It is conceivable that individuals initially free of periodontal disease might develop the condition later, potentially leading to an underestimation of the association for those groups. Another key limitation of using pregnancy as a categorical rather than a continuous variable is the potential loss of nuanced information regarding the incremental effects of each additional pregnancy on periodontal health. The exclusion of edentulous participants may have influenced our study findings, as individuals without teeth are unable to develop periodontitis and may represent a subgroup with a history of severe periodontal disease. To address these limitations, future studies should aim for larger longitudinal prospective designs to validate the findings from this initial study. While the study did not identify a difference in the prevalence of periodontitis between single and multiple pregnancies, the findings hold significance on two fronts. Firstly, the data were obtained from a substantial sample size, highlighting increased gingival and periodontal changes during pregnancy. This underscores the need to educate all women about these findings, aiming to prevent periodontal changes during pregnancy that may impact their regular daily routines. Secondly, as periodontal disease is deemed a risk factor for pregnancy outcomes, its control assumes prime importance. Addressing and managing periodontal health becomes crucial in optimizing pregnancy outcomes. Conclusion In summary, this study has explored the relationship between parity and the prevalence of periodontitis, revealing no significant association between the prevalence of periodontitis and the number of pregnancies. However, a longitudinal study may be warranted to delve deeper into any potential associations. Authors’ contributions Both Authors contributed equally from the idea to the preparing the draft and both authors reviewed and prepared the final draft of the study. Ethics and consent The protocols for collecting oral health data in the NHANES 2011–2012 and NHANES 2013–2014 cycles received approval from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention National Centre for Health Statistics Research Ethics Review Board. All survey participants provided written informed consent before publishing their information. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhanes/irba98.htm Data availability Availability of data Figshare: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease?, https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.25662546 29 The project contains the following underlying data: • Demographical Characteristics (e.g., gender, income, BMI …), Periodontal Disease status, Pregnancy status, and dental visits. Data are available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY 4.0). References 1. AlJehani YA: Risk factors of periodontal disease: review of the literature. Int. J. Dent. 2014; 2014 : 1–9. Publisher Full Text 2. Kinane DF, Stathopoulou PG, Papapanou PN: Periodontal diseases. Nat. Rev. Dis. Primers. 2017; 3 : 17038. Publisher Full Text 3. Steinberg BJ, Hilton IV, Iida H, et al. : Oral health and dental care during pregnancy. Dent. Clin. N. Am. 2013; 57 (2): 195–210. Publisher Full Text 4. Boyapati R, Cherukuri SA, Bodduru R, et al. : Influence of Female Sex Hormones in Different Stages of Women on Periodontium. J. Midlife Health. 2021; 12 (4): 263–266. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 5. Thomas KE, Chitra N: Periodontal changes pertaining to women from puberty to postmenopausal stage. Int. J. Pharm. Bio. Sci. 2013; 4 (2): B766–B771. 6. Soory M: Hormonal factors in periodontal disease. Dent. Update. 2000; 27 (8): 380–383. Publisher Full Text 7. Wu M, Chen SW, Jiang SY: Relationship between gingival inflammation and pregnancy. Mediat. Inflamm. 2015; 2015 : 623427. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 8. Coventry J, Griffiths G, Scully C, et al. : ABC of oral health: periodontal disease. BMJ. 2000; 321 (7252): 36–39. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 9. Gare J, Kanoute A, Meda N, et al. : Periodontal Conditions and Pathogens Associated with Pre-Eclampsia: A Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 2021; 18 (13). PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 10. Mariotti A, Mawhinney M: Endocrinology of sex steroid hormones and cell dynamics in the periodontium. Periodontol. 2000. 2013; 61 (1): 69–88. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 11. Morelli EL, Broadbent JM, Leichter JW, et al. : Pregnancy, parity and periodontal disease. Aust. Dent. J. 2018; 63 : 270–278. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 12. Sllamniku Dalipi Z, Dragidella F: Calcium and Vitamin D Supplementation as Non-Surgical Treatment for Periodontal Disease with a Focus on Female Patients: Literature Review. Dent. J (Basel). 2022; 10 (7). Publisher Full Text 13. Hansson SR, Nääv Å, Erlandsson L: Oxidative stress in preeclampsia and the role of free fetal hemoglobin. Front. Physiol. 2014; 5 : 516. 14. Abariga SA, Whitcomb BW: Periodontitis and gestational diabetes mellitus: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2016; 16 (1): 344. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 15. Ahnoux A, Aoussi EL, Anongba DS, et al. : Pregnancy and periodontal health. Study of 133 pregnant women. Odontostomatol. Trop. 2003; 26 (102): 37–40. PubMed Abstract 16. Moore S, Ide M, Wilson RF, et al. : Periodontal health of London women during early pregnancy. Br. Dent. J. 2001; 191 (10): 570–573. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 17. Eke PI, Page RC, Wei L, et al. : Update of the case definitions for population-based surveillance of periodontitis. J. Periodontol. 2012; 83 (12): 1449–1454. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 18. Aljoghaiman E, Helmi H: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease?07 December 2023. PREPRINT (Version 1) available at Research Square. Publisher Full Text 19. Machuca G, Khoshfeiz O, Lacalle JR, et al. : The influence of general health and socio-cultural variables on the periodontal condition of pregnant women. J. Periodontol. 1999; 70 (7): 779–785. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 20. de Vasconcellos Piscoya MDB , de Alencar Ximenes RA , da Silva GM , et al. : Periodontitis-associated risk factors in pregnant women. Clinics. 2012; 67 (1): 27–33. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 21. Taani D, Habashneh R, Hammad M, et al. : The periodontal status of pregnant women and its relationship with socio-demographic and clinical variables. J. Oral Rehabil. 2003; 30 (4): 440–445. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 22. Masoni S, Panattoni E, Rolla P, et al. : Stomatological problems related to pregnancy. A statistical study. Minerva Stomatol. 1991; 40 (12): 791–796. PubMed Abstract 23. Raber-Durlacher J, Van Steenbergen T, Van der Velden U, et al. : Experimental gingivitis during pregnancy and post-partum: clinical, endocrinological, and microbiological aspects. J. Clin. Periodontol. 1994; 21 (8): 549–558. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 24. Abraham-Inpijn L, Polsacheva O, Raber-Durlacher J: The significance of endocrine factors and microorganisms in the development of gingivitis in pregnant women. Stomatologiia. 1996; 75 (3): 15–18. PubMed Abstract 25. Bendek MJ, Canedo-Marroquín G, Realini O, et al. : Periodontitis and gestational diabetes mellitus: a potential inflammatory vicious cycle. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2021; 22 (21): 11831. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 26. Raju K, Berens L: Periodontology and pregnancy: An overview of biomedical and epidemiological evidence. Periodontol. 2021; 87 (1): 132–142. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 27. Gonzalez-Jaranay M, Téllez L, Roa-López A, et al. : Periodontal status during pregnancy and postpartum. PLoS One. 2017; 12 (5): e0178234. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text 28. Villa A, Abati S, Pileri P, et al. : Oral health and oral diseases in pregnancy: a multicentre survey of Italian postpartum women. Aust. Dent. J. 2013; 58 (2): 224–229. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 29. Aljoghaiman E: The Relationship Between Mental Health and Periodontal Disease: Insights from NHANES Data. [Dataset]. figshare. 2024. Publisher Full Text Comments on this article Comments (0) Version 2 VERSION 2 PUBLISHED 16 Oct 2024 ADD YOUR COMMENT Comment Author details Author details 1 Department of Periodontics and Community Dentistry, King Saud University, Riyadh, Riyadh Province, Saudi Arabia 2 Department of Preventive Dental Science, College of Dentistry, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia Mohammad Helmi Roles: Data Curation, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Software, Writing – Original Draft Preparation, Writing – Review & Editing Eman AlJoghaiman Roles: Conceptualization, Data Curation, Formal Analysis, Resources, Software, Supervision, Writing – Original Draft Preparation, Writing – Review & Editing Competing interests No competing interests were disclosed. Grant information The author(s) declared that no grants were involved in supporting this work. Article Versions (2) version 2 Revised Published: 06 Feb 2025, 13:1238 https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.2 version 1 Published: 16 Oct 2024, 13:1238 https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.1 Copyright © 2025 Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Download Export To Sciwheel Bibtex EndNote ProCite Ref. Manager (RIS) Sente metrics Views Downloads F1000Research - - PubMed Central info_outline Data from PMC are received and updated monthly. - - Citations open_in_new 0 open_in_new 0 open_in_new SEE MORE DETAILS CITE how to cite this article Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E. Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.155151.2 ) NOTE: If applicable, it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. COPY CITATION DETAILS track receive updates on this article Track an article to receive email alerts on any updates to this article. TRACK THIS ARTICLE Share Open Peer Review Current Reviewer Status: ? Key to Reviewer Statuses VIEW HIDE Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions Version 2 VERSION 2 PUBLISHED 06 Feb 2025 Revised Views 0 Cite How to cite this report: Shihayb DT. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364984 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-364984 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. Close Copy Citation Details Reviewer Report 10 Mar 2025 Dr. Talal Shihayb , Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Approved VIEWS 0 https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364984 I had a hard time tracking the changes and ... Continue reading READ ALL I had a hard time tracking the changes and suggest an easier way of tracking the changes for reviewers. Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: Periodontitis-systemic diseases, oral epidemiology, advanced methods, meta-research in oral health I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. Close READ LESS CITE CITE HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT Shihayb DT. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364984 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-364984 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. COPY CITATION DETAILS Report a concern Respond or Comment COMMENT ON THIS REPORT Views 0 Cite How to cite this report: Anas M. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r368196 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-368196 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. Close Copy Citation Details Reviewer Report 27 Feb 2025 Muhammad Anas , Bacha Khan College of Dentistry, Mardan, Pakistan Approved VIEWS 0 https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r368196 Title: The Association Between Pregnancy and Periodontitis: A Cross-Sectional Study Overall Assessment: This study investigates the relationship between pregnancy and periodontitis, providing valuable insights into the impact of pregnancy on gingival health. While the study has several strengths, including ... Continue reading READ ALL Title: The Association Between Pregnancy and Periodontitis: A Cross-Sectional Study Overall Assessment: This study investigates the relationship between pregnancy and periodontitis, providing valuable insights into the impact of pregnancy on gingival health. While the study has several strengths, including a substantial sample size and standardized protocol for diagnosing periodontal disease, it also has some limitations that affect the interpretation of the results. Recommendations: 1. Future studies should aim for larger longitudinal prospective designs to validate the findings from this initial study. 2. Consider collecting data on the status of gingival inflammation before pregnancy to better understand the impact of pregnancy on periodontal health. 3. Explore the utilization of dental care after the first pregnancy and its potential impact on the outcomes. 4. Consider using more nuanced measures of pregnancy, such as a continuous variable, to capture the incremental effects of each additional pregnancy on periodontal health. Conclusion: In conclusion, while this study provides valuable insights into the relationship between pregnancy and periodontitis, it has several limitations that affect the interpretation of the results. Future studies should aim to address these limitations and provide more robust evidence on the impact of pregnancy on periodontal health. Is the work clearly and accurately presented and does it cite the current literature? Yes Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? Yes Are sufficient details of methods and analysis provided to allow replication by others? Yes If applicable, is the statistical analysis and its interpretation appropriate? Yes Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes Are the conclusions drawn adequately supported by the results? Yes References 1. Anas M: Public Health Interventions Targeting Maternal Nutrition and Oral Health: A Narrative Review. Jordan Journal of Dentistry . 2025. Publisher Full Text Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: Dentistry, Oral Health, Oral and maxalliofaicial Surgery I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. Close READ LESS CITE CITE HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT Anas M. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r368196 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-368196 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. COPY CITATION DETAILS Report a concern Respond or Comment COMMENT ON THIS REPORT Views 0 Cite How to cite this report: Ajwa N. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364985 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-364985 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. Close Copy Citation Details Reviewer Report 12 Feb 2025 Nancy Ajwa , College of Dentistry, Riyadh Elem University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Approved VIEWS 0 https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364985 Thank you Authors for ... Continue reading READ ALL Thank you Authors for revising the manuscript. Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: Public Health, Periodontology, Orthodontology, Dentistry I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. Close READ LESS CITE CITE HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT Ajwa N. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364985 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-364985 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. COPY CITATION DETAILS Report a concern Respond or Comment COMMENT ON THIS REPORT Version 1 VERSION 1 PUBLISHED 16 Oct 2024 Views 0 Cite How to cite this report: Ajwa N. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r343703 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v1#referee-response-343703 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. Close Copy Citation Details Reviewer Report 26 Dec 2024 Nancy Ajwa , College of Dentistry, Riyadh Elem University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Approved VIEWS 0 https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r343703 The current structure provides a good foundation for the research paper. I have a few minor comments on the paper, which I am splitting in the headings so that authors can easily identify and improve the respective sections. Introduction: ... Continue reading READ ALL The current structure provides a good foundation for the research paper. I have a few minor comments on the paper, which I am splitting in the headings so that authors can easily identify and improve the respective sections. Introduction: -Consider moving some of the detailed descriptions of the hormonal mechanism to later paragraphs for better flow. -Add a brief sentence early in the introduction highlighting why studying multiple pregnancies (versus single pregnancy) is particularly important -Consider mentioning any geographical or population-specific gaps in current knowledge that this study helps address Methods: -Clarify the definition of pregnancy exposure (whether it includes completed pregnancies only or all pregnancies) -Add information about how missing data was handled in the analysis Results: -Round the odds ratios to 2 decimal places instead of 3 for better readability -Include smoking status data in Table 1, as it's an important variable that was mentioned in the methods but not shown in the results Discussion: -Add a brief discussion of the limitations of using pregnancy as a categorical rather than continuous variable -Include a short paragraph acknowledging the potential impact of excluding edentulous participants on the study findings These modifications would improve the manuscript while maintaining its overall scientific merit and indexing. The core findings and conclusions remain sound, and these suggested changes are minor in nature. Is the work clearly and accurately presented and does it cite the current literature? Yes Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? Yes Are sufficient details of methods and analysis provided to allow replication by others? Yes If applicable, is the statistical analysis and its interpretation appropriate? Yes Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes Are the conclusions drawn adequately supported by the results? Yes Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: Public Health, Periodontology, Orthodontology, Dentistry I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. Close READ LESS CITE CITE HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT Ajwa N. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r343703 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v1#referee-response-343703 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. COPY CITATION DETAILS Report a concern Author Response 06 Feb 2025 Eman AlJoghaiman , Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia 06 Feb 2025 Author Response Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely ... Continue reading Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Close Report a concern Respond or Comment COMMENTS ON THIS REPORT Author Response 06 Feb 2025 Eman AlJoghaiman , Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia 06 Feb 2025 Author Response Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely ... Continue reading Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Close Report a concern COMMENT ON THIS REPORT Views 0 Cite How to cite this report: Shihayb DT. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r332865 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v1#referee-response-332865 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. Close Copy Citation Details Reviewer Report 04 Nov 2024 Dr. Talal Shihayb , Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Approved with Reservations VIEWS 0 https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r332865 The authors assessed the effects of number of pregnancies on periodontitis. Studying pregnancy outcomes in relation to oral health is crucial. However, I have some comments on the paper: Introduction No comments. Methods ... Continue reading READ ALL The authors assessed the effects of number of pregnancies on periodontitis. Studying pregnancy outcomes in relation to oral health is crucial. However, I have some comments on the paper: Introduction No comments. Methods Can the authors explain why they only selected the 2011-2012 and 2013-2014 cycles of NHANES? The authors excluded edentulous participants from their study. Dealing with edentulous patients is tricky and not straight forward. If the reason for being edentulous was due to periodontal disease, the perhaps edentulous participants may be considered as the most severe form of periodontitis (since the authors are studying prevalent periodontitis and not incident periodontitis). Given that the authors are studying the accumulated exposure of pregnancy on periodontal disease, the results could be different had edentulous participants due to periodontal disease been included in the analysis, I suggest the authors add edentulous as a separate category or at least justify/discuss excluding edentulous participants from the study in the methods/discussion section. If by edentulous participants, the authors meant without any teeth, then any person with 1 tooth is automatically classified as mild periodontitis or no periodontitis and cannot be classified as moderate or severe. However, all included participants should have the chance to be in group of periodontitis, which is unfortunately prevented including participants with just 1 tooth. The authors perhaps may have already included those with at least 2 permanent teeth and if so, should make this clear. If not, then inclusion of participants with at least 2 teeth (if authors are still excluding edentulous participants) in the study or at least discussion of the impact of this aspect on the result is important. The authors defined the exposure as the number of pregnancies. Did the authors include all pregnancies whether completed or not? Providing more details on this aspect would make the paper more clear. Furthermore, the authors used it as a categorical variable instead of a continuous exposure. Unfortunately, this results in loss of information. I suggest the authors add this to the discussion section. The authors have defined the outcome of chronic periodontitis according to CDC/AAP. I suggest replacing the word periodontal disease with chronic periodontitis in the manuscript as the term periodontal disease is an umbrella term that includes multiple conditions. I suggest adding more details on how smoking and alcohol were classified or at least cite their webpages if the authors classified them as NHANES originally did. The authors wrote the following under statistical analysis: “To ensure unbiased point estimates and accurate variance estimation, considering the complex sampling design of NHANES, we applied proper sampling weights and utilized a licensed version of SAS survey procedures, following the recommendations of the National Centre for Health Statistics and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.” I think using clustering variables to correctly estimate standard errors should be added as both sampling weights and clustering are need to correctly estimate point estimates and standard errors, respectively. The authors have pointed out the covariates that they included in their study and mentioned the following under statistical analysis: “The multiple regression model included age, sex, race, income, and education level as explanatory variables. The selection of these potential confounders was based on either current literature evidence or their association with insurance and dental care utilization variables observed in bivariate analysis. The significance level was set at p ≤ 0.05, ensuring a rigorous evaluation of the relationships within the study.” Determining how the confounding variables were selected is very crucial in order to estimate the causal effect of multiple pregnancies on chronic periodontitis. In this study, the authors rightly determined age, sex, race, income, and education level as confounding variables based on previous knowledge and literature. However, the following on insurance and dental visit was not clear: “their association with insurance and dental care utilization variables observed in bivariate analysis.” Furthermore, assessing associations or confounding variables based on p-values should be avoided (please check [1],[2]) As a point related to the one above and based on the criteria the authors went with for determining confounding variables, unfortunately, smoking and diabetes (well-known confounding variables) were left out of the multivariable logistic regression model. Therefore, residual confounding exists in the result. I suggest adding them to the model or at least discuss how the residual confounding of these would impact the odds ratio of number of pregnancies on periodontitis. Results The authors did not elaborate on any missing data. Authors should show the frequency and % of missing data for each variables. In addition, authors should describe how they dealt with any missing data in their analysis and discuss its implications on the results. The authors mentioned that they have included the following covariates: “age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, poverty/income ratio, marital status, occupation, smoking habits, alcohol consumption, dental insurance coverage, dental visit frequency, and body mass index (BMI)” Although marital, status and occupation were mentioned in table 4, they along with smoking habits were not mentioned in table 1. Smoking habits was not even mentioned in any table. Authors should add these. In table 5, patients wrote: “Patients with dental visits in the 1-2 year range had greater odds (OR 1.129, 95% CI 0.772-1.651) of having periodontitis, but this association was not statistically significant (p > 0.05) (see Table 5 ).” The odds ratios of the confounding variables are of no interest to the authors in the study as they are do not correctly estimate their causal effect. This phenomena is well-known as Table 2 fallacy ( 3 ). Kindly just report the odds ratios of main variable of interest (number of pregnancies) and remove the other from text or table. Please round the odds of pregnancy on periodontitis to 2 digits as 3 digits adds nothing and just complicates reading the results. I suggest removing displaying/discussing the results in text as significant or non-significant and instead focus on the point estimates as well as their precision (please check [1]and[2] ) Discussion and conclusion The authors wrote in the limitations: “Additionally, being a retrospective cross-sectional study, our investigation relied on data from a study not specifically designed to address our hypothesis, potentially introducing clinical variations in the disease process.” The word retrospective should be removed as this was a cross-sectional study. Authors should further discuss the impact of no-temporality, pregnancy misclassification likelihood and effect, missing data, and leaving out important confounding variables. Is the work clearly and accurately presented and does it cite the current literature? Yes Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? Partly Are sufficient details of methods and analysis provided to allow replication by others? Partly If applicable, is the statistical analysis and its interpretation appropriate? Partly Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes Are the conclusions drawn adequately supported by the results? Partly References 1. Amrhein V, Gelman A, Greenland S, McShane B: Abandoning statistical significance is both sensible and practical. 2019. Publisher Full Text 2. Mansournia MA, Nazemipour M, Etminan M: P-value, compatibility, and S-value. Glob Epidemiol . 2022; 4 : 100085 PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 3. Akinkugbe AA, Simon AM, Brody ER: A scoping review of Table 2 fallacy in the oral health literature. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol . 2021; 49 (2): 103-109 PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise: Periodontitis-systemic diseases, oral epidemiology, advanced methods, meta-research in oral health I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard, however I have significant reservations, as outlined above. Close READ LESS CITE CITE HOW TO CITE THIS REPORT Shihayb DT. Reviewer Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r332865 ) The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v1#referee-response-332865 NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in all citations of this article. COPY CITATION DETAILS Report a concern Author Response 03 Feb 2025 Eman AlJoghaiman , Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia 03 Feb 2025 Author Response Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your ... Continue reading Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Close Report a concern Respond or Comment COMMENTS ON THIS REPORT Author Response 03 Feb 2025 Eman AlJoghaiman , Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia 03 Feb 2025 Author Response Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your ... Continue reading Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed. Close Report a concern COMMENT ON THIS REPORT Comments on this article Comments (0) Version 2 VERSION 2 PUBLISHED 16 Oct 2024 ADD YOUR COMMENT Comment keyboard_arrow_left keyboard_arrow_right Open Peer Review Reviewer Status info_outline Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions Reviewer Reports Invited Reviewers 1 2 3 Version 2 (revision) 06 Feb 25 read read read Version 1 16 Oct 24 read read Dr. Talal Shihayb , Boston University, Boston, USA Nancy Ajwa , Riyadh Elem University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia Muhammad Anas , Bacha Khan College of Dentistry, Mardan, Pakistan Comments on this article All Comments (0) Add a comment Sign up for content alerts Sign Up You are now signed up to receive this alert Browse by related subjects keyboard_arrow_left Back to all reports Reviewer Report 0 Views copyright © 2025 Shihayb D. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 10 Mar 2025 | for Version 2 Dr. Talal Shihayb , Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA 0 Views copyright © 2025 Shihayb D. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. format_quote Cite this report speaker_notes Responses (0) Approved info_outline Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions I had a hard time tracking the changes and suggest an easier way of tracking the changes for reviewers. Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise Periodontitis-systemic diseases, oral epidemiology, advanced methods, meta-research in oral health I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. reply Respond to this report Responses (0) Shihayb DT. Peer Review Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364984) NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-364984 keyboard_arrow_left Back to all reports Reviewer Report 0 Views copyright © 2025 Anas M. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 27 Feb 2025 | for Version 2 Muhammad Anas , Bacha Khan College of Dentistry, Mardan, Pakistan 0 Views copyright © 2025 Anas M. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. format_quote Cite this report speaker_notes Responses (0) Approved info_outline Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions Title: The Association Between Pregnancy and Periodontitis: A Cross-Sectional Study Overall Assessment: This study investigates the relationship between pregnancy and periodontitis, providing valuable insights into the impact of pregnancy on gingival health. While the study has several strengths, including a substantial sample size and standardized protocol for diagnosing periodontal disease, it also has some limitations that affect the interpretation of the results. Recommendations: 1. Future studies should aim for larger longitudinal prospective designs to validate the findings from this initial study. 2. Consider collecting data on the status of gingival inflammation before pregnancy to better understand the impact of pregnancy on periodontal health. 3. Explore the utilization of dental care after the first pregnancy and its potential impact on the outcomes. 4. Consider using more nuanced measures of pregnancy, such as a continuous variable, to capture the incremental effects of each additional pregnancy on periodontal health. Conclusion: In conclusion, while this study provides valuable insights into the relationship between pregnancy and periodontitis, it has several limitations that affect the interpretation of the results. Future studies should aim to address these limitations and provide more robust evidence on the impact of pregnancy on periodontal health. Is the work clearly and accurately presented and does it cite the current literature? Yes Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? Yes Are sufficient details of methods and analysis provided to allow replication by others? Yes If applicable, is the statistical analysis and its interpretation appropriate? Yes Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes Are the conclusions drawn adequately supported by the results? Yes References 1. Anas M: Public Health Interventions Targeting Maternal Nutrition and Oral Health: A Narrative Review. Jordan Journal of Dentistry . 2025. Publisher Full Text Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise Dentistry, Oral Health, Oral and maxalliofaicial Surgery I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. reply Respond to this report Responses (0) Anas M. Peer Review Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r368196) NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-368196 keyboard_arrow_left Back to all reports Reviewer Report 0 Views copyright © 2025 Ajwa N. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 12 Feb 2025 | for Version 2 Nancy Ajwa , College of Dentistry, Riyadh Elem University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia 0 Views copyright © 2025 Ajwa N. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. format_quote Cite this report speaker_notes Responses (0) Approved info_outline Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions Thank you Authors for revising the manuscript. Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise Public Health, Periodontology, Orthodontology, Dentistry I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. reply Respond to this report Responses (0) Ajwa N. Peer Review Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.177715.r364985) NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2#referee-response-364985 keyboard_arrow_left Back to all reports Reviewer Report 0 Views copyright © 2024 Ajwa N. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 26 Dec 2024 | for Version 1 Nancy Ajwa , College of Dentistry, Riyadh Elem University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia 0 Views copyright © 2024 Ajwa N. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. format_quote Cite this report speaker_notes Responses (1) Approved info_outline Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions The current structure provides a good foundation for the research paper. I have a few minor comments on the paper, which I am splitting in the headings so that authors can easily identify and improve the respective sections. Introduction: -Consider moving some of the detailed descriptions of the hormonal mechanism to later paragraphs for better flow. -Add a brief sentence early in the introduction highlighting why studying multiple pregnancies (versus single pregnancy) is particularly important -Consider mentioning any geographical or population-specific gaps in current knowledge that this study helps address Methods: -Clarify the definition of pregnancy exposure (whether it includes completed pregnancies only or all pregnancies) -Add information about how missing data was handled in the analysis Results: -Round the odds ratios to 2 decimal places instead of 3 for better readability -Include smoking status data in Table 1, as it's an important variable that was mentioned in the methods but not shown in the results Discussion: -Add a brief discussion of the limitations of using pregnancy as a categorical rather than continuous variable -Include a short paragraph acknowledging the potential impact of excluding edentulous participants on the study findings These modifications would improve the manuscript while maintaining its overall scientific merit and indexing. The core findings and conclusions remain sound, and these suggested changes are minor in nature. Is the work clearly and accurately presented and does it cite the current literature? Yes Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? Yes Are sufficient details of methods and analysis provided to allow replication by others? Yes If applicable, is the statistical analysis and its interpretation appropriate? Yes Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes Are the conclusions drawn adequately supported by the results? Yes Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise Public Health, Periodontology, Orthodontology, Dentistry I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard. reply Respond to this report Responses (1) Author Response 06 Feb 2025 Eman AlJoghaiman, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, View more View less Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. reply Respond Report a concern Ajwa N. Peer Review Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r343703) NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v1#referee-response-343703 keyboard_arrow_left Back to all reports Reviewer Report 0 Views copyright © 2024 Shihayb D. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 04 Nov 2024 | for Version 1 Dr. Talal Shihayb , Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA 0 Views copyright © 2024 Shihayb D. This is an open access peer review report distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. format_quote Cite this report speaker_notes Responses (1) Approved With Reservations info_outline Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved The paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved Fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions The authors assessed the effects of number of pregnancies on periodontitis. Studying pregnancy outcomes in relation to oral health is crucial. However, I have some comments on the paper: Introduction No comments. Methods Can the authors explain why they only selected the 2011-2012 and 2013-2014 cycles of NHANES? The authors excluded edentulous participants from their study. Dealing with edentulous patients is tricky and not straight forward. If the reason for being edentulous was due to periodontal disease, the perhaps edentulous participants may be considered as the most severe form of periodontitis (since the authors are studying prevalent periodontitis and not incident periodontitis). Given that the authors are studying the accumulated exposure of pregnancy on periodontal disease, the results could be different had edentulous participants due to periodontal disease been included in the analysis, I suggest the authors add edentulous as a separate category or at least justify/discuss excluding edentulous participants from the study in the methods/discussion section. If by edentulous participants, the authors meant without any teeth, then any person with 1 tooth is automatically classified as mild periodontitis or no periodontitis and cannot be classified as moderate or severe. However, all included participants should have the chance to be in group of periodontitis, which is unfortunately prevented including participants with just 1 tooth. The authors perhaps may have already included those with at least 2 permanent teeth and if so, should make this clear. If not, then inclusion of participants with at least 2 teeth (if authors are still excluding edentulous participants) in the study or at least discussion of the impact of this aspect on the result is important. The authors defined the exposure as the number of pregnancies. Did the authors include all pregnancies whether completed or not? Providing more details on this aspect would make the paper more clear. Furthermore, the authors used it as a categorical variable instead of a continuous exposure. Unfortunately, this results in loss of information. I suggest the authors add this to the discussion section. The authors have defined the outcome of chronic periodontitis according to CDC/AAP. I suggest replacing the word periodontal disease with chronic periodontitis in the manuscript as the term periodontal disease is an umbrella term that includes multiple conditions. I suggest adding more details on how smoking and alcohol were classified or at least cite their webpages if the authors classified them as NHANES originally did. The authors wrote the following under statistical analysis: “To ensure unbiased point estimates and accurate variance estimation, considering the complex sampling design of NHANES, we applied proper sampling weights and utilized a licensed version of SAS survey procedures, following the recommendations of the National Centre for Health Statistics and the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.” I think using clustering variables to correctly estimate standard errors should be added as both sampling weights and clustering are need to correctly estimate point estimates and standard errors, respectively. The authors have pointed out the covariates that they included in their study and mentioned the following under statistical analysis: “The multiple regression model included age, sex, race, income, and education level as explanatory variables. The selection of these potential confounders was based on either current literature evidence or their association with insurance and dental care utilization variables observed in bivariate analysis. The significance level was set at p ≤ 0.05, ensuring a rigorous evaluation of the relationships within the study.” Determining how the confounding variables were selected is very crucial in order to estimate the causal effect of multiple pregnancies on chronic periodontitis. In this study, the authors rightly determined age, sex, race, income, and education level as confounding variables based on previous knowledge and literature. However, the following on insurance and dental visit was not clear: “their association with insurance and dental care utilization variables observed in bivariate analysis.” Furthermore, assessing associations or confounding variables based on p-values should be avoided (please check [1],[2]) As a point related to the one above and based on the criteria the authors went with for determining confounding variables, unfortunately, smoking and diabetes (well-known confounding variables) were left out of the multivariable logistic regression model. Therefore, residual confounding exists in the result. I suggest adding them to the model or at least discuss how the residual confounding of these would impact the odds ratio of number of pregnancies on periodontitis. Results The authors did not elaborate on any missing data. Authors should show the frequency and % of missing data for each variables. In addition, authors should describe how they dealt with any missing data in their analysis and discuss its implications on the results. The authors mentioned that they have included the following covariates: “age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, poverty/income ratio, marital status, occupation, smoking habits, alcohol consumption, dental insurance coverage, dental visit frequency, and body mass index (BMI)” Although marital, status and occupation were mentioned in table 4, they along with smoking habits were not mentioned in table 1. Smoking habits was not even mentioned in any table. Authors should add these. In table 5, patients wrote: “Patients with dental visits in the 1-2 year range had greater odds (OR 1.129, 95% CI 0.772-1.651) of having periodontitis, but this association was not statistically significant (p > 0.05) (see Table 5 ).” The odds ratios of the confounding variables are of no interest to the authors in the study as they are do not correctly estimate their causal effect. This phenomena is well-known as Table 2 fallacy ( 3 ). Kindly just report the odds ratios of main variable of interest (number of pregnancies) and remove the other from text or table. Please round the odds of pregnancy on periodontitis to 2 digits as 3 digits adds nothing and just complicates reading the results. I suggest removing displaying/discussing the results in text as significant or non-significant and instead focus on the point estimates as well as their precision (please check [1]and[2] ) Discussion and conclusion The authors wrote in the limitations: “Additionally, being a retrospective cross-sectional study, our investigation relied on data from a study not specifically designed to address our hypothesis, potentially introducing clinical variations in the disease process.” The word retrospective should be removed as this was a cross-sectional study. Authors should further discuss the impact of no-temporality, pregnancy misclassification likelihood and effect, missing data, and leaving out important confounding variables. Is the work clearly and accurately presented and does it cite the current literature? Yes Is the study design appropriate and is the work technically sound? Partly Are sufficient details of methods and analysis provided to allow replication by others? Partly If applicable, is the statistical analysis and its interpretation appropriate? Partly Are all the source data underlying the results available to ensure full reproducibility? Yes Are the conclusions drawn adequately supported by the results? Partly References 1. Amrhein V, Gelman A, Greenland S, McShane B: Abandoning statistical significance is both sensible and practical. 2019. Publisher Full Text 2. Mansournia MA, Nazemipour M, Etminan M: P-value, compatibility, and S-value. Glob Epidemiol . 2022; 4 : 100085 PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text 3. Akinkugbe AA, Simon AM, Brody ER: A scoping review of Table 2 fallacy in the oral health literature. Community Dent Oral Epidemiol . 2021; 49 (2): 103-109 PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. Reviewer Expertise Periodontitis-systemic diseases, oral epidemiology, advanced methods, meta-research in oral health I confirm that I have read this submission and believe that I have an appropriate level of expertise to confirm that it is of an acceptable scientific standard, however I have significant reservations, as outlined above. reply Respond to this report Responses (1) Author Response 03 Feb 2025 Eman AlJoghaiman, Imam Abdulrahman Bin Faisal University, Dammam, Saudi Arabia Dear Reviewer, Thank you for your insightful review and valuable suggestions to enhance our manuscript. We have carefully revised the manuscript and highlighted the changes accordingly. We sincerely appreciate your time and thoughtful feedback. Best regards, View more View less Competing Interests No competing interests were disclosed. reply Respond Report a concern Shihayb DT. Peer Review Report For: Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease? [version 2; peer review: 3 approved] . F1000Research 2025, 13 :1238 ( https://doi.org/10.5256/f1000research.170283.r332865) NOTE: it is important to ensure the information in square brackets after the title is included in this citation. The direct URL for this report is: https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v1#referee-response-332865 Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article: Approved - the paper is scientifically sound in its current form and only minor, if any, improvements are suggested Approved with reservations - A number of small changes, sometimes more significant revisions are required to address specific details and improve the papers academic merit. Not approved - fundamental flaws in the paper seriously undermine the findings and conclusions Adjust parameters to alter display View on desktop for interactive features Includes Interactive Elements View on desktop for interactive features Competing Interests Policy Provide sufficient details of any financial or non-financial competing interests to enable users to assess whether your comments might lead a reasonable person to question your impartiality. Consider the following examples, but note that this is not an exhaustive list: Examples of 'Non-Financial Competing Interests' Within the past 4 years, you have held joint grants, published or collaborated with any of the authors of the selected paper. You have a close personal relationship (e.g. parent, spouse, sibling, or domestic partner) with any of the authors. You are a close professional associate of any of the authors (e.g. scientific mentor, recent student). You work at the same institute as any of the authors. You hope/expect to benefit (e.g. favour or employment) as a result of your submission. You are an Editor for the journal in which the article is published. Examples of 'Financial Competing Interests' You expect to receive, or in the past 4 years have received, any of the following from any commercial organisation that may gain financially from your submission: a salary, fees, funding, reimbursements. You expect to receive, or in the past 4 years have received, shared grant support or other funding with any of the authors. You hold, or are currently applying for, any patents or significant stocks/shares relating to the subject matter of the paper you are commenting on. Stay Updated Sign up for content alerts and receive a weekly or monthly email with all newly published articles Register with F1000Research Already registered? Sign in Not now, thanks close PLEASE NOTE If you are an AUTHOR of this article, please check that you signed in with the account associated with this article otherwise we cannot automatically identify your role as an author and your comment will be labelled as a “User Comment”. If you are a REVIEWER of this article, please check that you have signed in with the account associated with this article and then go to your account to submit your report, please do not post your review here. If you do not have access to your original account, please contact us . All commenters must hold a formal affiliation as per our Policies . The information that you give us will be displayed next to your comment. User comments must be in English, comprehensible and relevant to the article under discussion. We reserve the right to remove any comments that we consider to be inappropriate, offensive or otherwise in breach of the User Comment Terms and Conditions . Commenters must not use a comment for personal attacks. When criticisms of the article are based on unpublished data, the data should be made available. I accept the User Comment Terms and Conditions Please confirm that you accept the User Comment Terms and Conditions. Affiliation ✕ refresh Please enter your institution. Note: To add your institution or organisation, start typing the name and then select the correct name from the list. Where applicable, the name will appear in both the original language and in English. Do not paste in the name. If the name does not appear in the drop-down list, we will display the information you have entered. ✕ refresh Country/Region * USA UK Canada China France Germany Afghanistan Aland Islands Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory British Virgin Islands Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Christmas Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo Cook Islands Costa Rica Cote d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Democratic Republic of the Congo Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Falkland Islands Faroe Islands Federated States of Micronesia Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guernsey Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard Island and Mcdonald Islands Holy See (Vatican City State) Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jersey Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kosovo (Serbia and Montenegro) Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Minor Outlying Islands of the United States Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island North Korea North Macedonia Northern Mariana Islands Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territory Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Reunion Romania Russian Federation Rwanda Saint Helena Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Pierre and Miquelon Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia and the South Sandwich Is South Korea South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Svalbard and Jan Mayen Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand The Gambia The Netherlands Timor-Leste Togo Tokelau Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Turks and Caicos Islands Tuvalu UK USA Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United States Virgin Islands Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Vietnam Wallis and Futuna West Bank and Gaza Strip Western Sahara Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe Please select your country/region. You must enter a comment. Competing Interests Please disclose any competing interests that might be construed to influence your judgment of the article's or peer review report's validity or importance. Competing Interests Policy Provide sufficient details of any financial or non-financial competing interests to enable users to assess whether your comments might lead a reasonable person to question your impartiality. Consider the following examples, but note that this is not an exhaustive list: Examples of 'Non-Financial Competing Interests' Within the past 4 years, you have held joint grants, published or collaborated with any of the authors of the selected paper. You have a close personal relationship (e.g. parent, spouse, sibling, or domestic partner) with any of the authors. You are a close professional associate of any of the authors (e.g. scientific mentor, recent student). You work at the same institute as any of the authors. You hope/expect to benefit (e.g. favour or employment) as a result of your submission. You are an Editor for the journal in which the article is published. Examples of 'Financial Competing Interests' You expect to receive, or in the past 4 years have received, any of the following from any commercial organisation that may gain financially from your submission: a salary, fees, funding, reimbursements. You expect to receive, or in the past 4 years have received, shared grant support or other funding with any of the authors. You hold, or are currently applying for, any patents or significant stocks/shares relating to the subject matter of the paper you are commenting on. Please state your competing interests The comment has been saved. An error has occurred. Please try again. Cancel Post var lTitle = "Do more pregnancies increase the risk of...".replace("'", ''); var linkedInUrl = "http://www.linkedin.com/shareArticle?url=https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2" + "&title=" + encodeURIComponent(lTitle) + "&summary=" + encodeURIComponent('Read the article by '); var deliciousUrl = "https://del.icio.us/post?url=https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2&title=" + encodeURIComponent(lTitle); var redditUrl = "http://reddit.com/submit?url=https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2" + "&title=" + encodeURIComponent(lTitle); linkedInUrl += encodeURIComponent('Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E'); var offsetTop = /chrome/i.test( navigator.userAgent ) ? 4 : -10; var addthis_config = { ui_offset_top: offsetTop, services_compact : "facebook,twitter,www.linkedin.com,www.mendeley.com,reddit.com", services_expanded : "facebook,twitter,www.linkedin.com,www.mendeley.com,reddit.com", services_custom : [ { name: "LinkedIn", url: linkedInUrl, icon:"/img/icon/at_linkedin.svg" }, { name: "Mendeley", url: "http://www.mendeley.com/import/?url=https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2/mendeley", icon:"/img/icon/at_mendeley.svg" }, { name: "Reddit", url: redditUrl, icon:"/img/icon/at_reddit.svg" }, ] }; var addthis_share = { url: "https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238", templates : { twitter : "Do more pregnancies increase the risk of periodontal disease?. Helmi M and AlJoghaiman E, published by " + "@F1000Research" + ", https://f1000research.com/articles/13-1238/v2" } }; if (typeof(addthis) != "undefined"){ addthis.addEventListener('addthis.ready', checkCount); addthis.addEventListener('addthis.menu.share', checkCount); } $(".f1r-shares-twitter").attr("href", "https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=" + addthis_share.templates.twitter); $(".f1r-shares-facebook").attr("href", "https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=" + addthis_share.url); $(".f1r-shares-linkedin").attr("href", addthis_config.services_custom[0].url); $(".f1r-shares-reddit").attr("href", addthis_config.services_custom[2].url); $(".f1r-shares-mendelay").attr("href", addthis_config.services_custom[1].url); function checkCount(){ setTimeout(function(){ $(".addthis_button_expanded").each(function(){ var count = $(this).text(); if (count !== "" && count != "0") $(this).removeClass("is-hidden"); else $(this).addClass("is-hidden"); }); }, 1000); } close How to cite this report {{reportCitation}} Cancel Copy Citation Details $(function(){R.ui.buttonDropdowns('.dropdown-for-downloads');}); $(function(){R.ui.toolbarDropdowns('.toolbar-dropdown-for-downloads');}); $.get("/articles/acj/155151/177715") new F1000.Clipboard(); new F1000.ThesaurusTermsDisplay("articles", "article", "177715"); $(document).ready(function() { $( "#frame1" ).on('load', function() { var mydiv = $(this).contents().find("div"); var h = mydiv.height(); console.log(h) }); var tooltipLivingFigure = jQuery(".interactive-living-figure-label .icon-more-info"), titleLivingFigure = tooltipLivingFigure.attr("title"); tooltipLivingFigure.simpletip({ fixed: true, position: ["-115", "30"], baseClass: 'small-tooltip', content:titleLivingFigure + " " }); tooltipLivingFigure.removeAttr("title"); $("body").on("click", ".cite-living-figure", function(e) { e.preventDefault(); var ref = $(this).attr("data-ref"); $(this).closest(".living-figure-list-container").find("#" + ref).fadeIn(200); }); $("body").on("click", ".close-cite-living-figure", function(e) { e.preventDefault(); $(this).closest(".popup-window-wrapper").fadeOut(200); }); $(document).on("mouseup", function(e) { var metricsContainer = $(".article-metrics-popover-wrapper"); if (!metricsContainer.is(e.target) && metricsContainer.has(e.target).length === 0) { $(".article-metrics-close-button").click(); } }); var articleId = $('#articleId').val(); if($("#main-article-count-box").attachArticleMetrics) { $("#main-article-count-box").attachArticleMetrics(articleId, { articleMetricsView: true }); } }); var figshareWidget = $(".new_figshare_widget"); if (figshareWidget.length > 0) { window.figshare.load("f1000", function(Widget) { // Select a tag/tags defined in your page. In this tag we will place the widget. _.map(figshareWidget, function(el){ var widget = new Widget({ articleId: $(el).attr("figshare_articleId") //height:300 // this is the height of the viewer part. [Default: 550] }); widget.initialize(); // initialize the widget widget.mount(el); // mount it in a tag that's on your page // this will save the widget on the global scope for later use from // your JS scripts. This line is optional. //window.widget = widget; }); }); } close Error Close Add Reset F1000.MICROSERVICES.AFFILIATION = ''; $(document).ready(function () { $('.js-affiliations-form').each((index, form) => { new AffiliationForm({ formId: form.id, institutionErrorSelector: '.comment-enter-institution', departmentErrorSelector: '.comment-enter-department', placeSelector: '.js-add-comment-place', stateSelector: '.js-add-comment-state', zipCodeSelector: '.js-add-comment-zipcode', countrySelector: '.js-add-comment-country', countryErrorSelector: '.comment-enter-country', }); }); }); $(document).ready(function () { var reportIds = { "343703": 9, "343709": 0, "343708": 0, "343711": 0, "343710": 0, "343705": 0, "343704": 0, "343707": 0, "343706": 0, "343712": 0, "366901": 0, "366900": 0, "366903": 0, "366902": 0, "368189": 0, "366909": 0, "332861": 0, "368188": 0, "366908": 0, "332860": 0, "368191": 0, "332863": 0, "368190": 0, "332862": 0, "366905": 0, "364985": 6, "332857": 0, "366904": 0, "364984": 2, "332856": 0, "366907": 0, "332859": 0, "366906": 0, "332858": 0, "368197": 0, "368196": 10, "368193": 0, "332865": 16, "368192": 0, "332864": 0, "368195": 0, "368194": 0, "365538": 0, "365549": 0, "365548": 0, "365551": 0, "365550": 0, "365547": 0, "365553": 0, "365552": 0, }; $(".referee-response-container,.js-referee-report").each(function(index, el) { var reportId = $(el).attr("data-reportid"), reportCount = reportIds[reportId] || 0; $(el).find(".comments-count-container,.js-referee-report-views").html(reportCount); }); var uuidInput = $("#article_uuid"), oldUUId = uuidInput.val(), newUUId = "092b361a-ff04-415e-aeef-1a34a5372b26"; uuidInput.val(newUUId); $("a[href*='article_uuid=']").each(function(index, el) { var newHref = $(el).attr("href").replace(oldUUId, newUUId); $(el).attr("href", newHref); }); }); An innovative open access publishing platform offering rapid publication and open peer review, whilst supporting data deposition and sharing. Browse Gateways Collections How it Works Contact For Developers Cookie Notice Privacy Notice RSS Submit Your Research Follow us © 2012-2026 F1000 Research Ltd. ISSN 2046-1402 | Legal | Partner of Research4Life • CrossRef • ORCID • FAIRSharing R.templateTests.simpleTemplate = R.template(' $text $text $text $text $text '); R.templateTests.runTests(); var F1000platform = new F1000.Platform({ name: "f1000research", displayName: "F1000Research", hostName: "f1000research.com", id: "1", editorialEmail: "
[email protected]", infoEmail: "
[email protected]", usePmcStats: true }); $(function(){R.ui.dropdowns('.dropdown-for-authors, .dropdown-for-about, .dropdown-for-myresearch');}); // $(function(){R.ui.dropdowns('.dropdown-for-referees');}); $(document).ready(function () { if ($(".cookie-warning").is(":visible")) { $(".sticky").css("margin-bottom", "35px"); $(".devices").addClass("devices-and-cookie-warning"); } $(".cookie-warning .close-button").click(function (e) { $(".devices").removeClass("devices-and-cookie-warning"); $(".sticky").css("margin-bottom", "0"); }); $("#tweeter-feed .tweet-message").each(function (i, message) { var self = $(message); self.html(linkify(self.html())); }); $(".partner").on("mouseenter mouseleave", function() { $(this).find(".gray-scale, .colour").toggleClass("is-hidden"); }); }); Sign In Remember me Forgotten your password? Sign In Cancel Email or password not correct. Please try again Please wait... $(function(){ // Note: All the setup needs to run against a name attribute and *not* the id due the clonish // nature of facebox... $("a[id=googleSignInButton]").click(function(event){ event.preventDefault(); $("input[id=oAuthSystem]").val("GOOGLE"); $("form[id=oAuthForm]").submit(); }); $("a[id=facebookSignInButton]").click(function(event){ event.preventDefault(); $("input[id=oAuthSystem]").val("FACEBOOK"); $("form[id=oAuthForm]").submit(); }); $("a[id=orcidSignInButton]").click(function(event){ event.preventDefault(); $("input[id=oAuthSystem]").val("ORCID"); $("form[id=oAuthForm]").submit(); }); }); If you've forgotten your password, please enter your email address below and we'll send you instructions on how to reset your password. The email address should be the one you originally registered with F1000. Email address not valid, please try again You registered with F1000 via Google, so we cannot reset your password. To sign in, please click here . If you still need help with your Google account password, please click here . You registered with F1000 via Facebook, so we cannot reset your password. To sign in, please click here . If you still need help with your Facebook account password, please click here . Code not correct, please try again Reset password Cancel Email us for further assistance. Server error, please try again. If your email address is registered with us, we will email you instructions to reset your password. If you think you should have received this email but it has not arrived, please check your spam filters and/or contact for further assistance. Please wait... Register $(document).ready(function () { signIn.createSignInAsRow($("#sign-in-form-gfb-popup")); $(".target-field").each(function () { var uris = $(this).val().split("/"); if (uris.pop() === "login") { $(this).val(uris.toString().replace(",","/")); } }); });
Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below.
Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure
cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can
have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy
(via DOI)
is the canonical version.