Episode 15: Mob Rules
Aired 3/22/05
Young wiseguy Joey Arnello eats in a hotel room. His brother and
lawyer, Bill, is trying to talk him out of testifying. Joey stands
up and, feeling dizzy, collapses. Bill tries to help him but the
federal agents in the room think hes faking.
At the hospital, Vogler presses Cuddy for a budget on Houses
work. House comes in with a Federal Court Order issuing him to examine
their witness. House wants out of it. Cuddy tells him to either
see the patient or go to jail for contempt. After House leaves in
a huff, Vogler tells Cuddy she needs to get rid of House or else
give Vogler one good reason why they should keep him.
House examines the comatose Joey, who is non-responsive to bright
lights and pain. He is nearly dead. Bill wants to know whats
happening to his brother. House dismisses him, but Bill threatens
House that Joey needs to stay in the hospital so that he can talk
him out of testifying.
The MRI shows a subdural hematoma. House thinks those are pseudomembranes
from an old injury, which wouldnt cause a coma. He asks about
the liver, but Chase reports that the LFTs are only slightly elevated.
Foreman wants to go into Joeys brain and evacuate the cavity,
but Joey awakes and says that he doesnt want to be drilled.
With Joey awake, Houses team suggests releasing him. House
overrules them, asking for hepatitis serologies and an auto-immune
panel.
House learns that Vogler called admitting. They contacted the Justice
Department, which came and checked out Joey. Cuddy tells Vogler
that she can only control House. House demands to know who checked
out Joey. Vogler says that he wanted to keep the government off
the hospitals back.
However, Joey is rushed back into the hospital. After hes
stabilized, the team begins examining his file again. Joeys
liver is worse, but with completely different symptoms. Although
tests for Hepatitis C came back positive, House doesnt think
that explains the sudden onset. House orders a biopsy, but Chase
suggests starting Joey on Interferon to treat the Hep C first so
that he will improve faster. House tells him to start the treatment
but not to credit House for it. He also wants Chase to get a biopsy
while hes at it. House then holds Foreman back from the others
and announces that he is pulling him off the case because somebody
told Vogler that House lied to the transplant committee about Houses
last patient, Carly. House tells Foreman that he doesnt think
he was the culprit, but he wants Vogler, Cuddy and everybody else
to think thats what he believes.
Chase is in Joeys room explaining the Hepatitis C diagnosis,
but Bill becomes angry. He slaps Chase with the warning not to mention
that his brother has Hep C. He demands that Joey will not be treated
for it. Meanwhile, Cuddy tries to save House from Voglers
axe. Although she hates House, she still wants to save his job.
Vogler thinks that is proof that she does like him. This is bad
for business.
Bill corners House about the disrespect shown to Joey over the
Hep C diagnosis. House says that, between the jailhouse tattoos
and blood tests, hes guessing that Joey was raped in prison.
Bill admits that he heard rumors. Yet if this diagnosis gets out,
Joeys reputation will be destroyed. House agrees to administer
Interferon, but that he wont keep records on it.
Wilson lets House know that Cuddy has been locked up with Vogler
for two days arguing about Houses job. They notice a gleaming
red 65 Corvette parked in Houses spot. A note on the
windshield indicates that its a gift from the Arnellos. Foreman
rushes in with the news that Joeys blood pressure has dropped
and he is bleeding into his liver. House gets the results of Joeys
biopsy, which shows lymphocytic infiltrate and no bridging fibrosis.
This means that Joeys condition is acute and not a result
of Hep C. The other finding is that exposure to toxins has caused
this liver failure. He was poisoned.
Joeys liver begins to shut down. Although they have to wait
four hours until the next test results arrive, Joeys liver
will only last two hours. House has an idea. A pig is brought into
the hospital and placed next to Joey. An IV runs between an artery
in Joeys leg and the pigs liver. Cameron and Foreman
continue the search for toxins. House notices from chest X-rays
and white blood cell counts that Joey recently quit smoking. Outside
of Joeys room, the two federal marshals in charge of guarding
him argue. One of the marshals recently deposited $3,000 in his
wifes checking account, and the other marshal questions whether
it was a bribe. House interrupts them to announce that Joey took
enough smoking cessation candy containing a Chinese herb to poison
himself. He should be fine in a couple of hours.
That night, Wilson advises House to let Vogler tell the feds that
Joey can be released since it is important to Vogler. This will
also help Houses cause. The next day, House dons a lab coat
and enters Cuddys office. He gives Vogler the news that Joey
is free to go. Cuddy examines the file and wonders how lozenges
would cause such liver failure. House points out that its
a toxic match with Interferon. As Cuddy yells at House for altering
Joeys medical file, House is paged. Joey has lapsed into another
coma.
The team reconvenes to discuss causes. Chase again argues for Hep
C, which they never really treated. House again notes that Joeys
condition is acute and not chronic. Chase suggests an experimental
treatment thats never been tried on humans using a non-nucleoside
allosteric inhibitor to change the virus. Foreman phones a hospital
in Philadelphia thats currently testing this treatment on
dogs.
While seeing another patient, House has an epiphany. Sometimes
the simplest answer is the right one. On the teams white board,
House crosses out liver and estrogen. A discussion with Chase leads
House to start thinking about whats causing the comas. House
approaches the federal marshal that made the recent deposit. Bill
interrupts, saying they just gave the marshal some money to get
Joey some decent food not on the hospital menu. House sees that
Joey had a steak before each coma, and he mentions Ornithine Transcarbamylase
Deficiency which is a genetic condition. If the condition is in
the body and a patient eats a large amount of protein, the symptoms
can come out. If House is wrong and they stop treatment, Joey will
die. House admits that he could be wrong because of Joeys
increased estrogen level. But he has a theory. A product called
Male Flame contains estrogen. It is marketed to gay men and sold
on the same website that offered Joeys smoking cessation candy.
Bill adamantly declares that his brother isnt gay, but House
thinks this is an overreaction. If hes so sure, they will
continue Joeys treatment. Bill finally relents and Chase shuts
off Joeys IV. Bill still cant believe that his brother
might be gay. House points out that the only way a mob guy could
come out of the closet is to change his name and move to another
town. This is what happens after one testifies for the government.
After a few hours, Joey pulls out of his coma. He and Bill have
a last conversation about the decision to run away. Bill calls the
feds to announce that they are ready to make a deal. Even though
they danced around the issue, Joey smiles at his brothers
reluctant acceptance of his lifestyle.
Cuddy and House have another conversation. Cuddy says that Vogler
threatened to fire her, but she told him that she was the only one
who knows about the secret stuff that isnt in the books. So
Vogler needs her. She wants changes. House has to do six more clinic
hours a month and he must fire someone from his team. He has to
choose between Chase, Cameron or Foreman.
- From Fox.com
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