A
Alicja Wolk
Researcher at Karolinska Institutet
Publications - 829
Citations - 76043
Alicja Wolk is an academic researcher from Karolinska Institutet. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Prospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 135, co-authored 778 publications receiving 66239 citations. Previous affiliations of Alicja Wolk include United States Department of Agriculture & Uppsala University Hospital.
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Dietary Carbohydrate, Glycemic Index, and Glycemic Load in Relation to Risk of Colorectal Cancer in Women
TL;DR: The findings from this prospective study do not support the hypothesis that a high carbohydrate intake, a high glycemic index, and ahigh glycemic load increase the risk of colorectal cancer.
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Fruits and Vegetables and Ovarian Cancer Risk in a Pooled Analysis of 12 Cohort Studies
Anita Koushik,David J. Hunter,Donna Spiegelman,Kristin E. Anderson,Alan A. Arslan,W. Lawrence Beeson,Piet A. van den Brandt,Julie E. Buring,James R. Cerhan,Graham A. Colditz,Gary E. Fraser,Jo L. Freudenheim,Jeanine M. Genkinger,R. Alexandra Goldbohm,Susan E. Hankinson,Karen L. Koenig,Susanna C. Larsson,Michael F. Leitzmann,Marjorie L. McCullough,Anthony B. Miller,Alpa V. Patel,Thomas E. Rohan,Arthur Schatzkin,Ellen Smit,Walter C. Willett,Alicja Wolk,Shumin M. Zhang,Stephanie A. Smith-Warner +27 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that fruit and vegetable consumption in adulthood has no important association with the risk of ovarian cancer.
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Re: Heme Iron, Zinc, Alcohol Consumption, and Risk of Colon Cancer
Journal Article
Fatty fish consumption lowers the risk of endometrial cancer: a nationwide case-control study in Sweden.
TL;DR: In this article, the association of fish consumption and endometrial cancer risk in Sweden, a country with a wide range of high fatty fish consumption, was investigated using unconditional logistic regression models fit by maximum likelihood methods.
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Multivitamin use and the risk of myocardial infarction: a population-based cohort of Swedish women
Susanne Rautiainen,Agneta Åkesson,Emily B. Levitan,Ralf Morgenstern,Murray A. Mittleman,Alicja Wolk +5 more
TL;DR: The use of multivitamins was inversely associated with MI, especially long-term use among women with no CVD, especially after 10.2 y of follow-up, according to a prospective, population-based cohort of women from Sweden.