Preventing Ulcerative Colitis with Diet
PLAIN-2480 · run 19 (hybrid, A) vs run 16 (vector, B)
The actual ranked results each run returned for this one query, in order. Documents the benchmark judged relevant are highlighted green (with their relevance grade). Comparing the two columns shows why one run scored higher — which relevant docs it surfaced, and how near the top.
A — run 19 (hybrid)
- Dietary intake and risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review of the literature.
- Diet and risk of inflammatory bowel disease.
- Influence of dietary factors on the clinical course of ulcerative colitis: a prospective cohort study
- A Prospective Study of Long-term Intake of Dietary Fiber and Risk of Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
- An association between dietary arachidonic acid, measured in adipose tissue, and ulcerative colitis.
- Animal protein intake and risk of inflammatory bowel disease: The E3N prospective study.
- Products of the colonic microbiota mediate the effects of diet on colon cancer risk.
- Diet and colorectal cancer: a case-control study in Greece.
- Effect of a very-high-fiber vegetable, fruit, and nut diet on serum lipids and colonic function.
- Ability of a high-total antioxidant capacity diet to increase stool weight and bowel antioxidant status in human subjects.
B — run 16 (vector)
- Dietary intake and risk of developing inflammatory bowel disease: a systematic review of the literature.
- Diet and risk of inflammatory bowel disease.
- Influence of dietary factors on the clinical course of ulcerative colitis: a prospective cohort study
- A Prospective Study of Long-term Intake of Dietary Fiber and Risk of Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis
- Animal protein intake and risk of inflammatory bowel disease: The E3N prospective study.
- Products of the colonic microbiota mediate the effects of diet on colon cancer risk.
- Diet and colorectal cancer: a case-control study in Greece.
- Effect of a very-high-fiber vegetable, fruit, and nut diet on serum lipids and colonic function.
- Ability of a high-total antioxidant capacity diet to increase stool weight and bowel antioxidant status in human subjects.
- An association between dietary arachidonic acid, measured in adipose tissue, and ulcerative colitis.