Episode 9: DNR
Aired 2/1/05
A famous and wheelchair-bound horn player named John Henry Giles
plays with a band. By mid-session he loses his breath and passes
out from a lack of oxygen. At the hospital, House wants a piece
of the case. Hes intrigued that John Henry has been paralyzed
for two years without explanation. Cuddy tells House that theyre
only treating John Henry for pneumonia. The mans paralysis
was treated by his primary doctor, Marty Hamilton, in Los Angeles.
Foreman did his residency with Dr. Hamilton.
Per Dr. Hamiltons request, Houses team starts searching
for causes. Hamilton had already diagnosed the paralysis as an effect
of ALS, so pneumonia is a possible answer. House doesnt buy
this, and seeks other explanations for the paralysis. He suggests
an MRI. As Foreman does up the blood work, John Henry requests a
Do Not Resuscitate order. Foreman has John Henry put
on an IVIG, which later causes him to crash because blood cant
get to his lungs. Chase wants to intubate, but Foreman mentions
the DNR. House intubates anyway.
Foreman yells at House for saving a patient who chose not to be
saved. House reasons that it was the IVIG that caused the reaction,
not the disease. Foreman angrily points out that this was Houses
fault because he suggested the treatment. House is hit with a restraining
order to stay away from John Henry. Criminal charges for battery
will be filed. House presses on, ordering Cameron and Chase to consider
other possibilities. Cuddy supports House in his case. Yet Foreman
has called Dr. Hamilton, who is now flying in from Los Angeles.
In court, the hospital lawyer argues that Houses has the right
to face his accuser. Since John Henry is on life support, the trial
will have to wait. Back at the hospital, Chase sees on the lung
biopsy that there is only inflammation. Since House cant order
more testing, he begins blind treatment. He suggests starting John
Henry on cytoxan, which treats Wegeners disease. If House
is right, John Henry will start walking again. If hes wrong,
Cameron and Chase could lose their medical licenses.
House is about to administer the cytoxan when Dr. Hamilton shows
up. Hamilton, who only calls House by his first name, says that
he had initially checked for Wegeners. House reminds Hamilton
of the error rate that occurs in those blood tests and biopsies.
Hamilton wants to pull the plug. House tells Wilson that if it is
indeed Wegeners, John Henrys lungs wont be able
to handle the stress and hell die. When he is removed from
life support, John Henry starts to breathe on his own. House was
wrong about Wegeners disease.
With John Henrys arm now paralyzed, everybody but House is
convinced hes stricken with ALS. House asks for more thinking.
The battery charges have been dropped, so House can treat John Henry
once again. House visits the patient, who admits that since he cant
play the trumpet any more, he doesnt mind dying. House asks
John Henry to just let him find out whats afflicting him.
If he still wants to die, House will help make it quick and painless.
House puts John Henry into an MRI.
Hamilton offers Foreman a job that pays three times what he now
makes and includes many other perks. Foreman mentions the offer
to Cameron and Chase, who point out that they dont do this
for the money. They also dont hate House like Foreman does.
Looking over John Henrys MRI, Cameron notices sign of a stroke.
That would explain the paralyzed arm. Foreman explains the options
to John Henry. They can give him heparin to thin his blood and remove
the clot, but it could hurt his lungs. Another option is to go in
for brain surgery and take the clot out. Not wanting to risk his
lungs, John Henry opts for the surgery.
The surgery is a success. John Henry can move his arm following
the embolectomy and he feels it when House touches his leg. The
doctors are baffled. Hamilton thinks his ALS treatments are the
answer. House thinks they need to take John Henry off the dozen
drugs theyre currently giving him in order to restart the
dosage one by one to see which is having the effect. If not, the
toxicity of the useless drugs could kill him.
Hamilton asks House which medications he had been treating John
Henry with. House resists, but then realizes that Hamilton needs
to know because the patient is worsening. He cant feel his
leg anymore. House prescribes steroids and a second MRI. Meanwhile,
House and Foreman discuss their working relationship. House tells
Foreman to take the new job if Hamilton is a better doctor.
The MRI results show that John Henry suffers from Arteriovenous
Malformation. It was compressing his spine, which caused the paralysis.
Foreman wonders how Hamilton could have missed something so simple.
House points out that they all missed it too, so something must
have been hiding it. It was the inflammation that they first saw
on the lung biopsy. The steroids treated the inflammation and allowed
the AVM to show on the MRI. After surgery to remove the AVM, John
Henry walks out of the hospital with a simple cane, not a wheelchair.
- From Fox.com
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