Episode 17: Role Model
Aired 4/12/05
Senator Gary Wright speaks at a fundraiser, but stumbles through
the end of his speech. Then he struggles to converse with a supporter.
Wright vomits on the mans suit before collapsing and tumbling
down a flight of stairs.
Vogler gives the Senators case to House. He also notes that
if House was a team player from the start, then he wouldnt
have to fire Cameron or Foreman. Vogler wants House to give a speech
at the National Cardiology Conference next week where he is to extol
the virtues of Eastbrook Pharmaceuticals new and more expensive
ACE inhibitor. Eastbrook is owned by Vogler. House chafes at the
request. Vogler says he is to make the speech and examine the Senator,
or else he will have to fire one of his protégés.
House and Foreman examine Wright, but Foreman does all the work.
The man has a big scar on his tongue, which Wright explains happened
when he was six and fell off the swings. House doesnt buy
that explanation, pointing out that tongues heal fast. Then House
notices that Wright has no reflexes when Foreman taps him with a
mallet. House orders an MRI and a lumbar puncture, telling the Senator
to cancel his travel plans.
The LP results are negative for infection and the MRI is fairly
clean. There is, however, a low intensity spot inside the Brocas
area of the brain. House tells the team that the lesion could either
be nothing, a brain tumor or an infection. He orders surgery. He
also lets the team know that none of them will have to worry about
their jobs. House doesnt go into further details.
Cuddy is angry at House for attempting a risky brain biopsy based
on a spot on an MRI. It could cause permanent neurological damage.
House argues that a tumor is just as bad, but Cuddy says that neither
of them can make that call. They lay out the situation to Senator
Wright, explaining that it could be something or it could be nothing.
Wright asks what the voters will think. House becomes intrigued
when he hears Wright stutter while asking the question.
Surgery begins. Afterwards, the biopsy shows that there is no tumor
or bacterial infection. Yet Wilson becomes quite concerned as he
examines the biopsy and finds toxoplasmosis. This means that Wright
has full-blown AIDS. Foreman and House explain to Wright that toxoplasmosis
is a fairly common fungus that people can get from eating undercooked
meat or touching cat feces. It usually responds to treatment and
it only causes lesions when a patients immune system is not
functioning. The doctors think he has AIDS. Wright angrily denies
the possibility. House informs him that the toxo drugs will fight
the fungi, but its going to be nasty. Wright firmly orders
House to give him the toxo drugs, test him for HIV under a false
name, and then run a test for cancer. Wright again proclaims that
he does not have AIDS.
Cameron comes across an email press release announcing Houses
upcoming speech and reads it to Chase. Theyre shocked that
House would do this. House enters and explains his deal with Vogler.
He tells them that Foreman is testing Wright for leukemia, but he
needs Chase and Cameron to rush the Elisa test for HIV. Cameron
thanks him for agreeing to give the speech, but House presses on.
Foreman administers the test by injecting Wright in the back, and
he says that they can wait until the HIV test results return. Wright
claims not to be lying because black politicians cant lie
and nobody gives them the benefit of the doubt.
House gives Wright the results of the Elisa test. Its positive.
His T cell count is so low, he is close to death. They will need
to contact his sexual partners. Wright insists that hes only
had two girlfriends since his wife died and that he used condoms.
House tells him to come clean and admit to homosexual relations.
Wright chides House for being so cynical and never believing in
people. House draws some more blood from Wright.
The next day, Wright tries to get out of bed, but his foot is numb.
Cuddy thinks the antiretrovirals arent working, and she prods
House for not seeing that Wright is just going to get worse. House
is more concerned with why Cuddy is spying on his case. House tells
Wright that the antiretrovirals are not working because he doesnt
have AIDS. The test returned a false positive, which happens one
time in five thousand. Wrights relief is erased when House
says that he is still dying, only now they dont know why.
House convenes the team outside, away from Cuddy. Foreman notes
that Wright is losing control of the muscles on his right side,
his brain is getting foggier and his T cells are still in the single
digits. What could be causing this? House orders a full body scan.
Wilson asks House if he ran a second AIDS test because he suspected
a false positive. House claims that it is standard procedure, which
Wilson knows he doesnt care about. House admits that he was
moved by Wrights insistence that he didnt engage in
risk behaviors. Wilson mocks Houses first bout of actually
believing in people. Wilson then wonders if being near the ultra-nice
Cameron is rubbing off on House. He then realizes that House has
an interest in Cameron.
A CT scan on Wright reveals five slightly enlarged lymph nodes
and a cyst in both his liver and right kidney. Cuddy orders all
this to be checked out. Vogler enters, handing House his notes for
the speech. House criticizes Vogler for undermining him in front
of his staff. Vogler retorts that they already know that House is
undermined. House pulls Chase into his office for a speech. He asks
Chase how they can work together with Chase constantly reporting
on him. Chase responds that he had no choice.
Foreman performs the multiple biopsies on a sedated Wright. He
finds that both cysts are benign and that all the lymph nodes are
clean. House suspects hairy cell leukemia and wants to biopsy Wrights
spleen. Everybody resists. Chase insists that the spleen will bleed
too much and Cuddy believes that, because of the Senators
condition, this procedure could cause sepsis and death. Foreman
says that Wrights brain is turning to mush. They have to do
it.
House approaches Cameron in the lab and tries to inquire as to
why she would like him, but it goes nowhere. They bicker about Houses
personal issues and he leaves.
Foreman approaches Wright to get a consent signature for the biopsy,
but Wright now has a hacking cough. Foreman says they dont
need consent because they cant perform the biopsy. He tells
the team that Wrights breathing is severely impaired. His
stain indicates pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, which is another
killer fungus consistent with hairy cell leukemia. Yet with respiratory
distress, they cant biopsy because Wrights blood wont
clot. How else can they diagnose hairy cell? House wonders what
other symptoms a patient with hairy cell would have. Chase and Cameron
suggest virii like HTLV and interleukin-2. House orders tests for
both.
Foreman shows House the test results. Wright is negative on all
virii. Its not hairy cell. House notices that Wright is positive
for Epstein Barr. He rushes into Wrights room and removes
his oxygen mask. Wright begins gasping for air. House says that
he knows the tongue scar is from an epileptic seizure. Wright says
he hasnt had a seizure since he was six and has not been on
medication since he was ten. House asks if the medication was phenytoin,
which Wright confirms.
House bursts into his office and tells the team. Wright took phenytoin.
This, along with the Epstein Barr virus, is associated with common
variable immunodeficiency disease. The body cant fight off
fungi. House posits that Wright contracted this as a kid. Yet recent
stress, like giving big speeches, triggered its reemergence. Cameron
doubts it, but House orders an IV immunoglobin. If Wright improves,
House is right. If House is wrong, Wright is dead.
Foreman inserts the IV. The medicine begins to drip. After some
time, Wright improves greatly. Hell need medication for the
rest of his life, but he will be fine.
The time comes for Houses big speech. He dispassionately
reads a one paragraph statement about the drug. Vogler stops House
and tells him that wasnt enough. House returns to the microphone
and praises Vogler as a brilliant businessman. House then congratulates
Eastbrook and Vogler for smartly tweaking their ACE inhibitor just
slightly enough to win a new patent and make millions more.
That night, House is at home ignoring his phone when Cameron drops
by. She tells House that he wont have to fire anyone because
shes leaving. This is the only way she can deal with her feelings
for him.
- From Fox.com
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