“…Along with the attention paid to the negative impacts of asymptomatic I‐M3s on oral health, the influence of N‐M3s on the health of neighboring teeth has also gained increasing attention from dentists in recent years (Chou, Ho, Ho, Wang, & Hu, 2017; Li, Qu, Zhou, Tian, & Chen, 2017; Li, Qu, Zhou, Tian, Gao, et al, 2017). Based on previous data, the presence of N‐M3s may increase the risk of pathology in M2s; specifically, the risk of periodontal damage in M2s with the presence of N‐M3s was found to be 1.45–6.79 times higher than that of M2s without neighboring M3s (Kindler et al, 2018; Li, Qu, Zhou, Tian, & Chen, 2017; Li, Qu, Zhou, Tian, Gao, et al, 2017; Nunn et al, 2013; Qu et al, 2017). Consistent with these previous studies, our study also confirmed that the presence of N‐M3s increased the risk of periodontal destruction in their adjacent M2s, and the PD5+ risk in M2s adjacent to N‐M3s was 2.58‐fold higher than that in M2s without neighboring M3s (Table 2).…”