Publications by authors named "S Wijkstra"

Article Synopsis
  • A study evaluated the prevalence of Neisseria meningitidis carriage among college students in the Netherlands after the introduction of the MenACWY vaccine, using saliva and oropharyngeal samples for detection.
  • Of the 299 students tested, 25% were identified as carriers of meningococci, with 20% detected through qPCR testing, indicating a comparable effectiveness of saliva and oropharyngeal sampling methods.
  • The findings revealed low prevalence rates of various genogroups, with 8% of students carrying the vaccine-type meningococci, suggesting that saliva sampling combined with qPCR can effectively monitor meningococcal carriage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effect of pregnancy on lactation was studied during the third week of lactational pregnancy in postpartum pregnant rats with a delay in implantation of only 1 day (1d-LP rats). In an experimental design in which the suckling litter was prevented from consuming solid food, lactational performance was estimated by weighing the ten-pup suckling litters on days 16-21 of lactation or by measuring maternal weight loss after a nursing spell on day 21. In 1d-LP rats, food consumption as well as lactational performance was lower than it was in nonpregnant lactating rats (L rats) and pregnant-lactating rats with a normal long delay of implantation of at least 6 days (LP rats).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To partly or completely satisfy the increasing demand for insulin, pregnant rats were infused SC with human insulin (2.4 or 4.8 IU/day) from day 14 to day 20 of gestation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pancreatic beta-cell function was studied in adult female rats, in which endogenous insulin demand was fully met by SC infusion of human insulin (4.8 IU/24 h) for 6 days, resulting in hyperinsulinaemia and severe hypoglycaemia. The amount of pancreatic endocrine tissue declined by 40%, (pro)insulin mRNA, as determined by in situ hybridisation by 95%, and the amount of stored insulin by 90%.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF