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Ben U. Ridwan

Utrecht University

Publishes on Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology, Immune Cell Function and Interaction. 8 papers and 1k citations.

8Publications
1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Automated Ribotyping of Vancomycin-Resistant <i>Enterococcus faecium</i> Isolates
Sylvain Brisse, Vivian Fussing, Ben U. Ridwan et al.|Journal of Clinical Microbiology|2002
Cited by 42Open Access

Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREF) strains represent an important threat in hospital infections in the United States and are found at high frequencies in both the community and farm animals in Europe. We evaluated automated ribotyping for interlaboratory reproducibility by using the restriction enzymes EcoRI and BamHI and compared ribotyping to both amplification of fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis and multilocus sequence typing (MLST) to assess its discriminatory power and capacity for the identification of epidemiologically important strains. Of 19 (EcoRI) and 16 (BamHI) isolates tested in duplicate in two laboratories, 18 (95%) and 16 (100%), respectively, showed reproducible ribotypes. These high reproducibility rates were obtained only after manual refinement of the automated fingerprint analysis. A group of 49 VREF strains initially selected to represent 32 distinct AFLP types were separated into 28 EcoRI ribotypes, 25 BamHI ribotypes, and 28 sequence types. Ribotyping with EcoRI and BamHI was able to discern the host-specific genogroups recently disclosed by AFLP typing and MLST and to distinguish most strains containing the esp gene, a marker specific for strains causing hospital outbreaks. An expandable ribotype identification library was created. We recommend EcoRI as the enzyme of choice for automated ribotyping of VREF strains. Given the high level of discrimination of VREF strains, the high rate of interlaboratory reproducibility, and the potential for the identification of epidemiologically important genotypes, automated ribotyping appears to be a very valuable approach for characterizing VREF strains.

Cyclosporiasis Outbreak, Indonesia
Marjolijn C.A. Blans, Ben U. Ridwan, Jaco J. Verweij et al.|Emerging infectious diseases|2005
Cited by 37Open Access

We describe an outbreak of Cyclospora cayetanensis infection among Dutch participants at a scientific meeting in September 2001 in Bogor, Indonesia. Fifty percent of the investigated participants were positive for C. cayetanensis. To our knowledge, this outbreak is the first caused by C. cayetanensis among susceptible persons in a disease-endemic area.