Hans Chiari
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Hans Chiari (1851-1916} was a German pathologist, who practiced medicine in Prague and Strassburg. His primary duties were concerned with port-mortem examinations, and most of his 177 published writings are the result of these autopsies.
In 1891, he described a brain malformation that is characterized by abnormalities in the region where the brain and spinal cord meet, and it causes part of the cerebellum to protrude through the foramen magnum (bottom of the skull) into the spinal canal. This was to be called the Arnold-Chiari malformation, named after Chiari and another pathologist, Julius Arnold (1835-1915). The malformation was given its name in 1907 by two of Dr. Arnold's students. However, Arnold and Chiari were not the first to describe this condition; a Scottish physician named John Cleland (1835-1925} first described the malformation in 1883, and called it "basilar impression syndrome".
Chiari has another eponymous medical term named after him; Budd-Chiari syndrome, which is ascites and cirrhosis of the liver caused by an obstruction of the hepatic vein due to a blood clot. Named in conjuction with British internist, George Budd (1808-1882).