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Václav Treitz (also Wenzel Treitz) (1819 – August 27, 1872) was a Czech pathologist who was a native of Hostomice, Bohemia. He studied medicine in Prague, and performed post-graduate studies in Vienna with Joseph Hyrtl (1810–1894). Subsequently he practiced medicine at the Jagellonian University in Krakow, and in 1855 returned to Prague where he became a professor and director of the Pathologic Anatomy Institute. Throughout his career, Treitz was a figure in the struggle for Czech nationalism. In 1872, at the age of 52, he committed suicide by ingesting potassium cyanide. [edit] Named structuresTreitz is remembered for his 1853 discovery of the suspensory muscle of the duodenum (musculus suspensorius duodeni), which was later named the ligament of Treitz. This muscle is a fibrous structure by which the duodenojejunal junction is fixed to the posterior wall of the abdominal cavity. His name is attached to several other anatomical terms, all of which are still valid today:
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