-ELY-
08-01-2008, 10:00
Fonte: FOX official web site
Alone - 25/09/07
When a gas main explodes, a young woman named Megan Bradberry is buried beneath a collapsed building. Severely injured, her face almost unrecognizable, Megan is rushed to a hospital, where she undergoes a tracheotomy and is placed on a ventilator. Cuddy is puzzled by one aspect of the case: Megan is suffering from an unexplained fever. House isn’t interested in the case, as he doesn’t have a team. When Cuddy orders him to take the case, House says he’ll do it on his own, provided she goes away for a week if he makes the correct diagnosis.
As House mulls over the facts in Megan’s case, he talks out loud, as if his team was in the room with him. He then bounces ideas off the janitor, Leon, and eventually concludes that the fever was triggered by an infection. Dressed in a lab coat, Leon accompanies House to Megan’s room. There, House interviews Megan’s boyfriend, Ben, and her mother, hoping to discover what might have caused the infection. When that avenue dead-ends, House and Wilson break into Megan’s residence to look for clues. House finds Megan’s secret diary. Inside are entries describing her depression. House suspects Megan has been taking anti-depressants which, in combination with the drugs she’s being given at the hospital, produced the infection. At the hospital, House convinces Ben and Mrs. Bradberry that it’s in Megan’s best interest to be placed on dialysis, even though both of them refuse to believe she’s secretly been taking medication for depression.
When House returns to his office, he discovers that his prized guitar has been kidnapped. He suspects Wilson is to blame, but Wilson denies it. Meanwhile, Cuddy asks Megan a series of questions. Since Megan is unable to talk, Cuddy instructs her to blink once for “yes” and twice for “no.” Suddenly, Megan’s heart rate soars. Cuddy is forced to use defibrillator paddles to return Megan’s heart rate to normal.
House and Cuddy are now faced with two unexplained symptoms: fever and tachycardia. House proposes a second explanation for the illness: the DTs. Ben dismisses the idea as nonsense; he knows Megan isn’t an alcoholic.
Convinced that Wilson stole his guitar, House shows up to Wilson’s hotel apartment and begins erasing his beloved telenovelas. Meanwhile, at the hospital, Cuddy realizes Megan is silently screaming.
Cuddy tells House that Megan has developed pancreatitis. House attributes the development to the IV alcohol being used to treat Megan DTs. Later, Wilson reacts with mock revulsion when he pulls the tremolo arm of a guitar out of a package mailed to House. He tells House that the kidnappers mean business. House insists he’s not hiring a team to help him diagnose cases.
An MRI shows no abnormalities on Megan’s pancreas, but House realizes she’s bleeding internally. House enters the operating room where Megan is undergoing surgery. He examines Megan’s uterus with the help of an endoscope. It shows she recently underwent an abortion. This leads him to conclude that Megan was taking birth control pills. A short time later, House meets Doug McMurtry, whose girlfriend, Liz Masters, was working with Megan at the time of the explosion. Doug tells House that Liz died from her injuries.
House tells Ben that Megan had an abortion and is on birth control medication. Ben insists this isn’t true, as they both wanted kids. House places Megan on tamoxifen, an anti-cancer drug, to block estrogen receptors. Cuddy relays word that Megan is now experiencing breathing difficulties and her kidneys are failing.
A young doctor suggests to House that Megan is suffering from ARDS and Crush Syndrome, both reactions to severe trauma. The problem is, there’s nothing doctors can do to save her. House gives Ben and Mrs. Bradberry the bad news. Yet House notices a lump on Megan’s arm. It turns out the lump was triggered by an allergic reaction. Ben and Mrs. Bradberry insist the allergy diagnosis doesn’t make sense.
Still convinced that Wilson stole his guitar, House moves one of Wilson’s cancer patients to another room in the hospital. Wilson confronts House, and warns of catastrophe should the patient be given the wrong medication. House thinks about this for a moment -- and makes a connection. House makes his way to Megan’s room, where he tells Ben and Mrs. Bradberry that the girl on the bed isn’t Megan. It’s Liz Masters. Both women have the same build and hair color. This explains why nothing added up in terms of a diagnosis: House had the wrong patient. Unfortunately, it also means that Megan is dead.
Cuddy orders House to assemble a team. Later, as House twangs his guitar, he addresses a group of candidates.
The Right Stuff - 2/10/07
A female Air Force pilot named Greta flies a Stealth fighter jet with precision over a desert landscape. She begins to perceive sounds for the flight rather than visuals. She heads for a crash into the mountainside. Greta is actually in a virtual reality flight simulator inside a warehouse. Angry and confused, she blames the controller for her crash.
In the hospital lecture hall, House asks the Fellowship candidates to identify the man on the screen behind him. It is the actor Buddy Ebsen, who was diagnosed with an allergy to aluminum dust in the make-up used on him as the original Tin Man character in “The Wizard of Oz.” House dismisses the group to investigate the allergy. Cuddy comes to the door to tell House he’d better start eliminating candidates. House proceeds to fire the entire Row C. Yet when a pretty applicant goes to leave, House changes it to Row D instead.
House gets a page from his own pager number. He enters his office to find Greta waiting. She offers him fifty thousand dollars in cash to diagnose what is wrong with her. It appears that she is seeing with her ears, and she hopes to keep this fact from NASA and the Air Force where she is a candidate for astronaut training.
House brings the case of synesthesia to the remaining group of applicants and tells them to keep it a secret. He assigns some candidates to perform different tests on the patient. Another group is sent to break into Greta’s home to find out what she is hiding. He tells the rest of the candidates to wash his car.
While candidate Jeffery Cole washes House’s car, the others assigned to it complain. Amber Volakis has them all stop, and she takes the car to a carwash with Cole.
The trio designated to break into the patient’s home also complain. Henry Dobson, a candidate far older than the others, manages to break into the apartment and outsmarts his younger colleagues.
Candidates Taub, Jody and “Thirteen” report back to House that the patient has an elevated red blood count. A group of doctors walk past House’s office and he notices that one looks very much like Chase. House decides that the cause of Greta’s problem must be carbon monoxide poisoning from her fireplace.
When Amber returns from the carwash, House has her put the patient into a hyperbaric chamber. In the chamber, Greta suffers a heart attack from the oxygen therapy. The doctors try different methods to save her. When they hit her with defibrillator paddles, Greta is set on fire.
House asks the doctors what could have caused the heart attack. Henry suggests a cardiomyopathy, and House tells him to do a transesophageal echo. He orders the rest to go document ten things that cause infection in the hospital cafeteria. House tells Wilson that he saw Chase. Wilson thinks it’s only an illusion, and he attributes it to House’s guilt because Chase and Cameron are in Arizona.
Henry hesitates inserting the endoscope into Greta and gives it to Thirteen to do instead. The Fellows follow House down the hallway to update him. He recommends a test for hyperthyroidism. While candidate Chris Taub administers the test, the patient has a panicked reaction when she finds out that they had been to her home. Greta runs out of the room and locks herself in the hospital chapel. As the Fellows try to reason with her, House arrives. He notices someone who looks like Cameron but with blonde hair. Cuddy comes upon House to ask the identity of the mystery patient in her hospital. She admonishes him about running everything past her.
House checks in with the team, and they decide that the patient suffers from liver cancer. House asks Wilson for advice on how to test Greta. Lawrence Kutner, who was eliminated as number 6 has returned with his number upside down as a 9. Kutner provides the answer: they should get Greta drunk and measure her response. House chooses Cole, a Mormon who does not drink alcohol, to be the control group.
While feeding Greta shots of tequila, House thinks that he sees Forman walk by. He chases him down the hall. By the time House returns to Greta’s room, she has disappeared. Cuddy chastises House for the unorthodox tests he is doing. She takes a whiff of him and asks if he has been drinking.
With Cole and Thirteen, House examines Greta’s belabored breathing and concludes that she has lung cancer. Greta refuses surgery, fearing that NASA will see the scars it will cause. House consults the Fellows. Since Taub is a plastic surgeon, he suggests breast implant surgery to mask the scars. Prior to surgery, Cuddy asks House to explain why the patient is undergoing cosmetic surgery. He says it is in the best interest of the patient.
During the surgery, the team finds cysts on Greta’s lungs. House calls out to the doctors for a diagnosis. He hears someone in the viewing gallery give the correct answer -- Von Hippel-Lindau Syndrome. That person is Chase. House is unsure if this is another vision but then realizes it is not. Chase has joined the surgical staff of the hospital and he was really in the hall.
House confronts Wilson who knew all along that Chase returned from Arizona. Cameron now works downstairs in the emergency room of Princeton-Plainsboro. Forman is at New York Mercy Hospital.
Greta awakes from surgery and still insists on not telling NASA. House lets her know that he told NASA himself.
House is in front of the candidates in the lecture hall and announces his selections. In the hallway, he addresses the eldest candidate, Henry. House says that he knows Henry did not attend medical school. He offers him the position of assistant.
House approaches Cameron in the ER. He says that he had lied about telling NASA of Greta’s condition. He couldn’t kill her dream.
97 Seconds - 9/10/07
Thomas Stark, a young man in a power wheelchair, and his English Shepard service dog, Hoover, exit a minivan. Stark begins to motor himself across the street when he suddenly loses consciousness. Hoover reacts as cars approach. A driver that is changing her radio station dial is unaware of the impending crash. She hits the breaks just in time. The woman runs out to check on the young man slouched in his wheelchair in the middle of the road.
At Princeton-Plainsboro, House arrives in the lecture hall to describe Thomas Stark’s condition to the remaining Fellows. He wants to split the candidates into two teams to investigate the condition. Twin 15B suggests women be pitted against men. Amber asks to be on the men’s team to increase her chances of being selected. Yet the guys resist because they hate her. The men and women discuss options for diagnosis. Kutner suggests that the patient’s recent trip to Thailand had something to do with his illness.
Amber approaches Cameron in the ER to get her help on the case. House attends to Mark Allmore, a young man who is bruised from a car accident. Suddenly, Allmore pulls out a knife and sticks it into an electrical socket, electrocuting himself.
Thirteen believes that Stark picked up a thread worm called Strongyloides while in Thailand. She gives him a cup with two pills and he asks for some water. Kutner and Brennan enter the room to perform tests on Stark. They carry him to the bathroom to collect samples. Cuddy asks House what is wrong with Stark. He really does not know.
House obsesses with Wilson about the man who shocked himself. House plays with the knife Allmore used.
Amber walks into the men’s team but she is unwelcome. She offers information from Cameron in exchange for entry onto their squad and they agree. Amber administers a test on Stark that involves a jar of bugs biting him. He starts to choke.
The Fellows and House discuss the new development. Thirteen insists that Stark has Spinal Muscular Atrophy and Strongyloides worms. Twin 15A thinks they need to stress Stark’s system. House penalizes the men with detention for only performing tests while the women actually tried to heal Stark.
Allmore tells House that he wasn’t trying to kill himself. He was only trying to re-experience the bliss of the 97 seconds he was technically dead caused by a car crash.
Amber and the men’s team deduce that a tumor in Stark’s neck could be the trouble. She sneaks out and finds Stark on a tilt table, where his vitals remain stable despite being swung like a human see-saw.
House has decorated the lecture hall like a tribal council. Amber enters holding a CT film that House dismisses. She then hounds Chase in the operating room to look at the scan. She convinces him to run a blood test on Stark for her. Amber takes the blood from Stark. It is the color green -- which is the unprocessed dye from the CT test. His kidneys are failing.
House is stumped. He was sure that Thirteen’s diagnosis of Strongyloides was correct. Amber stands by her theory of scleroderma. When he finds out that Chase helped Amber, House confronts Chase in front of the Fellows. House believes Stark really has cancer.
At Mercy Hospital, Forman is trying to diagnose a case with a team of his own but he is struggling. He’s accustomed to thinking “outside-the-box,” and he cannot find common ground with Schaffer, his new “play–it-safe” supervisor. Foreman comes to a decision about what to do. He pushes his patient’s bed in the hallway, literally taking things into his own hands.
Back at Princeton-Plainsboro, House wants to remove Stark’s eye because he believes this is the source of the cancer. This enrages Cuddy. Stark refuses the surgery. He does not want to live if it means not walking, not eating and now not seeing. House belittles Stark’s belief in the beyond to Wilson. Misery, he says, it better than nothing. House contemplates death and the afterlife in his office. He plays with Allmore’s knife and stares longingly at an electrical socket.
Amber and Thirteen attend to Stark’s lungs. He can barely breathe, and the liquid removed from his lungs is clear, not bloody. If he had cancer, there would be blood.
Amber is paged by House and she finds him lying unconscious on his office floor from electric shock. House wakes up in the same room as Allmore. Wilson takes over leadership of the Fellows.
Wilson lets House know that Allmore just passed away and that Stark probably has Eosinophilic pneumonia rather than cancer. Wilson prescribes House some extra pain meds. This, of course, pleases House.
Stark is near death. The Fellows assure him that the new medicine will work. He asks for his faithful service dog, Hoover.
After Stark dies, Amber brings the news to House and asks why he summoned her with the page. He explains that, if he died, she’d never get the job. He knew she wouldn’t let that occur.
When they get to Stark’s room, Hoover the dog is also dead. House asks Thirteen if she actually witnessed the patient take the pills for thread worm. She hesitates. The medicine is fatal for dogs like Hoover with the MDR1 gene. House finds the empty pill cup on the floor. There are dog teeth marks on it.
At Mercy, Foreman’s unorthodox treatment works for his patient. Yet his supervisor Schaffer is unhappy. She does not tolerate bending of any rules. Schaffer fires Foreman on the spot.
House meets with Thirteen. Her initial diagnosis was correct -- Stark would have lived had he taken the pills. She begs to be spared the lecture and for him to just fire her. Yet House is giving the lecture because he is not firing her. He knows Thirteen will never let something like this happen ever again.
Alone - 25/09/07
When a gas main explodes, a young woman named Megan Bradberry is buried beneath a collapsed building. Severely injured, her face almost unrecognizable, Megan is rushed to a hospital, where she undergoes a tracheotomy and is placed on a ventilator. Cuddy is puzzled by one aspect of the case: Megan is suffering from an unexplained fever. House isn’t interested in the case, as he doesn’t have a team. When Cuddy orders him to take the case, House says he’ll do it on his own, provided she goes away for a week if he makes the correct diagnosis.
As House mulls over the facts in Megan’s case, he talks out loud, as if his team was in the room with him. He then bounces ideas off the janitor, Leon, and eventually concludes that the fever was triggered by an infection. Dressed in a lab coat, Leon accompanies House to Megan’s room. There, House interviews Megan’s boyfriend, Ben, and her mother, hoping to discover what might have caused the infection. When that avenue dead-ends, House and Wilson break into Megan’s residence to look for clues. House finds Megan’s secret diary. Inside are entries describing her depression. House suspects Megan has been taking anti-depressants which, in combination with the drugs she’s being given at the hospital, produced the infection. At the hospital, House convinces Ben and Mrs. Bradberry that it’s in Megan’s best interest to be placed on dialysis, even though both of them refuse to believe she’s secretly been taking medication for depression.
When House returns to his office, he discovers that his prized guitar has been kidnapped. He suspects Wilson is to blame, but Wilson denies it. Meanwhile, Cuddy asks Megan a series of questions. Since Megan is unable to talk, Cuddy instructs her to blink once for “yes” and twice for “no.” Suddenly, Megan’s heart rate soars. Cuddy is forced to use defibrillator paddles to return Megan’s heart rate to normal.
House and Cuddy are now faced with two unexplained symptoms: fever and tachycardia. House proposes a second explanation for the illness: the DTs. Ben dismisses the idea as nonsense; he knows Megan isn’t an alcoholic.
Convinced that Wilson stole his guitar, House shows up to Wilson’s hotel apartment and begins erasing his beloved telenovelas. Meanwhile, at the hospital, Cuddy realizes Megan is silently screaming.
Cuddy tells House that Megan has developed pancreatitis. House attributes the development to the IV alcohol being used to treat Megan DTs. Later, Wilson reacts with mock revulsion when he pulls the tremolo arm of a guitar out of a package mailed to House. He tells House that the kidnappers mean business. House insists he’s not hiring a team to help him diagnose cases.
An MRI shows no abnormalities on Megan’s pancreas, but House realizes she’s bleeding internally. House enters the operating room where Megan is undergoing surgery. He examines Megan’s uterus with the help of an endoscope. It shows she recently underwent an abortion. This leads him to conclude that Megan was taking birth control pills. A short time later, House meets Doug McMurtry, whose girlfriend, Liz Masters, was working with Megan at the time of the explosion. Doug tells House that Liz died from her injuries.
House tells Ben that Megan had an abortion and is on birth control medication. Ben insists this isn’t true, as they both wanted kids. House places Megan on tamoxifen, an anti-cancer drug, to block estrogen receptors. Cuddy relays word that Megan is now experiencing breathing difficulties and her kidneys are failing.
A young doctor suggests to House that Megan is suffering from ARDS and Crush Syndrome, both reactions to severe trauma. The problem is, there’s nothing doctors can do to save her. House gives Ben and Mrs. Bradberry the bad news. Yet House notices a lump on Megan’s arm. It turns out the lump was triggered by an allergic reaction. Ben and Mrs. Bradberry insist the allergy diagnosis doesn’t make sense.
Still convinced that Wilson stole his guitar, House moves one of Wilson’s cancer patients to another room in the hospital. Wilson confronts House, and warns of catastrophe should the patient be given the wrong medication. House thinks about this for a moment -- and makes a connection. House makes his way to Megan’s room, where he tells Ben and Mrs. Bradberry that the girl on the bed isn’t Megan. It’s Liz Masters. Both women have the same build and hair color. This explains why nothing added up in terms of a diagnosis: House had the wrong patient. Unfortunately, it also means that Megan is dead.
Cuddy orders House to assemble a team. Later, as House twangs his guitar, he addresses a group of candidates.
The Right Stuff - 2/10/07
A female Air Force pilot named Greta flies a Stealth fighter jet with precision over a desert landscape. She begins to perceive sounds for the flight rather than visuals. She heads for a crash into the mountainside. Greta is actually in a virtual reality flight simulator inside a warehouse. Angry and confused, she blames the controller for her crash.
In the hospital lecture hall, House asks the Fellowship candidates to identify the man on the screen behind him. It is the actor Buddy Ebsen, who was diagnosed with an allergy to aluminum dust in the make-up used on him as the original Tin Man character in “The Wizard of Oz.” House dismisses the group to investigate the allergy. Cuddy comes to the door to tell House he’d better start eliminating candidates. House proceeds to fire the entire Row C. Yet when a pretty applicant goes to leave, House changes it to Row D instead.
House gets a page from his own pager number. He enters his office to find Greta waiting. She offers him fifty thousand dollars in cash to diagnose what is wrong with her. It appears that she is seeing with her ears, and she hopes to keep this fact from NASA and the Air Force where she is a candidate for astronaut training.
House brings the case of synesthesia to the remaining group of applicants and tells them to keep it a secret. He assigns some candidates to perform different tests on the patient. Another group is sent to break into Greta’s home to find out what she is hiding. He tells the rest of the candidates to wash his car.
While candidate Jeffery Cole washes House’s car, the others assigned to it complain. Amber Volakis has them all stop, and she takes the car to a carwash with Cole.
The trio designated to break into the patient’s home also complain. Henry Dobson, a candidate far older than the others, manages to break into the apartment and outsmarts his younger colleagues.
Candidates Taub, Jody and “Thirteen” report back to House that the patient has an elevated red blood count. A group of doctors walk past House’s office and he notices that one looks very much like Chase. House decides that the cause of Greta’s problem must be carbon monoxide poisoning from her fireplace.
When Amber returns from the carwash, House has her put the patient into a hyperbaric chamber. In the chamber, Greta suffers a heart attack from the oxygen therapy. The doctors try different methods to save her. When they hit her with defibrillator paddles, Greta is set on fire.
House asks the doctors what could have caused the heart attack. Henry suggests a cardiomyopathy, and House tells him to do a transesophageal echo. He orders the rest to go document ten things that cause infection in the hospital cafeteria. House tells Wilson that he saw Chase. Wilson thinks it’s only an illusion, and he attributes it to House’s guilt because Chase and Cameron are in Arizona.
Henry hesitates inserting the endoscope into Greta and gives it to Thirteen to do instead. The Fellows follow House down the hallway to update him. He recommends a test for hyperthyroidism. While candidate Chris Taub administers the test, the patient has a panicked reaction when she finds out that they had been to her home. Greta runs out of the room and locks herself in the hospital chapel. As the Fellows try to reason with her, House arrives. He notices someone who looks like Cameron but with blonde hair. Cuddy comes upon House to ask the identity of the mystery patient in her hospital. She admonishes him about running everything past her.
House checks in with the team, and they decide that the patient suffers from liver cancer. House asks Wilson for advice on how to test Greta. Lawrence Kutner, who was eliminated as number 6 has returned with his number upside down as a 9. Kutner provides the answer: they should get Greta drunk and measure her response. House chooses Cole, a Mormon who does not drink alcohol, to be the control group.
While feeding Greta shots of tequila, House thinks that he sees Forman walk by. He chases him down the hall. By the time House returns to Greta’s room, she has disappeared. Cuddy chastises House for the unorthodox tests he is doing. She takes a whiff of him and asks if he has been drinking.
With Cole and Thirteen, House examines Greta’s belabored breathing and concludes that she has lung cancer. Greta refuses surgery, fearing that NASA will see the scars it will cause. House consults the Fellows. Since Taub is a plastic surgeon, he suggests breast implant surgery to mask the scars. Prior to surgery, Cuddy asks House to explain why the patient is undergoing cosmetic surgery. He says it is in the best interest of the patient.
During the surgery, the team finds cysts on Greta’s lungs. House calls out to the doctors for a diagnosis. He hears someone in the viewing gallery give the correct answer -- Von Hippel-Lindau Syndrome. That person is Chase. House is unsure if this is another vision but then realizes it is not. Chase has joined the surgical staff of the hospital and he was really in the hall.
House confronts Wilson who knew all along that Chase returned from Arizona. Cameron now works downstairs in the emergency room of Princeton-Plainsboro. Forman is at New York Mercy Hospital.
Greta awakes from surgery and still insists on not telling NASA. House lets her know that he told NASA himself.
House is in front of the candidates in the lecture hall and announces his selections. In the hallway, he addresses the eldest candidate, Henry. House says that he knows Henry did not attend medical school. He offers him the position of assistant.
House approaches Cameron in the ER. He says that he had lied about telling NASA of Greta’s condition. He couldn’t kill her dream.
97 Seconds - 9/10/07
Thomas Stark, a young man in a power wheelchair, and his English Shepard service dog, Hoover, exit a minivan. Stark begins to motor himself across the street when he suddenly loses consciousness. Hoover reacts as cars approach. A driver that is changing her radio station dial is unaware of the impending crash. She hits the breaks just in time. The woman runs out to check on the young man slouched in his wheelchair in the middle of the road.
At Princeton-Plainsboro, House arrives in the lecture hall to describe Thomas Stark’s condition to the remaining Fellows. He wants to split the candidates into two teams to investigate the condition. Twin 15B suggests women be pitted against men. Amber asks to be on the men’s team to increase her chances of being selected. Yet the guys resist because they hate her. The men and women discuss options for diagnosis. Kutner suggests that the patient’s recent trip to Thailand had something to do with his illness.
Amber approaches Cameron in the ER to get her help on the case. House attends to Mark Allmore, a young man who is bruised from a car accident. Suddenly, Allmore pulls out a knife and sticks it into an electrical socket, electrocuting himself.
Thirteen believes that Stark picked up a thread worm called Strongyloides while in Thailand. She gives him a cup with two pills and he asks for some water. Kutner and Brennan enter the room to perform tests on Stark. They carry him to the bathroom to collect samples. Cuddy asks House what is wrong with Stark. He really does not know.
House obsesses with Wilson about the man who shocked himself. House plays with the knife Allmore used.
Amber walks into the men’s team but she is unwelcome. She offers information from Cameron in exchange for entry onto their squad and they agree. Amber administers a test on Stark that involves a jar of bugs biting him. He starts to choke.
The Fellows and House discuss the new development. Thirteen insists that Stark has Spinal Muscular Atrophy and Strongyloides worms. Twin 15A thinks they need to stress Stark’s system. House penalizes the men with detention for only performing tests while the women actually tried to heal Stark.
Allmore tells House that he wasn’t trying to kill himself. He was only trying to re-experience the bliss of the 97 seconds he was technically dead caused by a car crash.
Amber and the men’s team deduce that a tumor in Stark’s neck could be the trouble. She sneaks out and finds Stark on a tilt table, where his vitals remain stable despite being swung like a human see-saw.
House has decorated the lecture hall like a tribal council. Amber enters holding a CT film that House dismisses. She then hounds Chase in the operating room to look at the scan. She convinces him to run a blood test on Stark for her. Amber takes the blood from Stark. It is the color green -- which is the unprocessed dye from the CT test. His kidneys are failing.
House is stumped. He was sure that Thirteen’s diagnosis of Strongyloides was correct. Amber stands by her theory of scleroderma. When he finds out that Chase helped Amber, House confronts Chase in front of the Fellows. House believes Stark really has cancer.
At Mercy Hospital, Forman is trying to diagnose a case with a team of his own but he is struggling. He’s accustomed to thinking “outside-the-box,” and he cannot find common ground with Schaffer, his new “play–it-safe” supervisor. Foreman comes to a decision about what to do. He pushes his patient’s bed in the hallway, literally taking things into his own hands.
Back at Princeton-Plainsboro, House wants to remove Stark’s eye because he believes this is the source of the cancer. This enrages Cuddy. Stark refuses the surgery. He does not want to live if it means not walking, not eating and now not seeing. House belittles Stark’s belief in the beyond to Wilson. Misery, he says, it better than nothing. House contemplates death and the afterlife in his office. He plays with Allmore’s knife and stares longingly at an electrical socket.
Amber and Thirteen attend to Stark’s lungs. He can barely breathe, and the liquid removed from his lungs is clear, not bloody. If he had cancer, there would be blood.
Amber is paged by House and she finds him lying unconscious on his office floor from electric shock. House wakes up in the same room as Allmore. Wilson takes over leadership of the Fellows.
Wilson lets House know that Allmore just passed away and that Stark probably has Eosinophilic pneumonia rather than cancer. Wilson prescribes House some extra pain meds. This, of course, pleases House.
Stark is near death. The Fellows assure him that the new medicine will work. He asks for his faithful service dog, Hoover.
After Stark dies, Amber brings the news to House and asks why he summoned her with the page. He explains that, if he died, she’d never get the job. He knew she wouldn’t let that occur.
When they get to Stark’s room, Hoover the dog is also dead. House asks Thirteen if she actually witnessed the patient take the pills for thread worm. She hesitates. The medicine is fatal for dogs like Hoover with the MDR1 gene. House finds the empty pill cup on the floor. There are dog teeth marks on it.
At Mercy, Foreman’s unorthodox treatment works for his patient. Yet his supervisor Schaffer is unhappy. She does not tolerate bending of any rules. Schaffer fires Foreman on the spot.
House meets with Thirteen. Her initial diagnosis was correct -- Stark would have lived had he taken the pills. She begs to be spared the lecture and for him to just fire her. Yet House is giving the lecture because he is not firing her. He knows Thirteen will never let something like this happen ever again.