Episode 10: Failure to Communicate
Aired 1/10/06
A famous writer named Fletcher Stone toasts an outgoing magazine
editor named Greta. He collapses during his speech, but when he
comes to he can only speak gibberish, using completely incorrect
words in sentences.
At the hospital, Cuddy asks Foreman to recommend a diagnostic department
since House is currently out of town. Fletcher had a blow to the
head followed by aphasia. Foreman sarcastically recommends another
neurologist one that House wanted to hire until he saw Foreman's
credentials. Cuddy relents and gives Foreman the file.
Foreman and team begin the examination. Fletcher thinks hes
speaking normally, but when he searches for a word he picks the
wrong one. He has also lost the ability to write, which is called
agraphia. Greta arrives at the hospital and tells the doctors that
Fletcher didnt trip. He simply keeled over.
House and Stacy go to Baltimore to prepare for a Medicaid billing
hearing. Stacy advises him not to defend his ridiculous billing
practices. The administrator, noting that House rated all of his
cases as fives on the difficulty scale, decides that Medicaid will
have to examine every single case.
Chase and Cameron chafe under Foremans leadership. They believe
that the blunt trauma caused everything, but Foreman wonders if
a stroke occurred beforehand. The doctors draw blood and hook up
an EEG in search of a clot that could have possibly moved to the
brain. Fletcher begins to struggle for breath and his O2 stats drop.
The doctors rush to intubate.
Looking at an x-ray, Foreman notices fluid in Fletchers lungs.
A seizure could not have caused both aphasia and fluid in the lungs.
The stroke could not have caused those symptoms either, unless Fletcher
suffered from an abnormal heart rhythm. Chase hands Foreman a fax
indicating that Fletchers urine tested positive for amphetamines,
which do not cause pulmonary edema unless they are smoked. Fletcher
claimed in one of his books that he gave up drugs and changed his
life. Could he be lying?
House turns to Wilson for the scoop because Cuddy called him about
the case. Wilson tells him about the tox screen and that Fletchers
high temperature. House thinks that this rules out drugs. Foreman
throws out encephalitis and meningitis as the obvious suspect. He
recommends a course of antibiotics. Cameron wonders if its
an autoimmune disease. House calls the team and asks why they havent
called him for advice.
House orders antibiotics for meningitis and encephalitis, saying
that the team will be screwed if it turns out to be autoimmune deficiency.
He demands an MRI and a family history for genetic issues. After
House hangs up, Cameron reminds Foreman whos really in charge.
The team begins to interview Fletcher, his wife and his former editor
for a recent history. Chase sends Fletcher through the MRI. The
scan shows a little brain swelling and scarring, but not in the
area thats currently affected by aphasia.
Back in Baltimore, a blizzard has delayed Houses flight.
Although she intentionally booked a later flight home to avoid him,
Stacy runs into House in the airport.
Chase says that if Fletcher has meningitis, they need to do a lumbar
puncture to identify it. Foreman says that if they are doing an
LP on a patient with edema it could paralyze him. Cameron wants
to know what House thinks, but Foreman reports that Houses
cell phone is out of service. They need more information in order
to act, so Foreman suggests breaking into Fletchers place.
At the airport, House continues asking Stacy about her crucifix.
He has noticed that she wasnt wearing it earlier and he knows
that shes never gone a day without it. She refuses to answer.
Later that night, Foreman and Chase pore through Fletchers
office, finding caffeine pills and amphetamines. This matches up
with Fletchers admission. They also uncover Topamax, an anticonvulsant
that wasnt even prescribed to him. Chase wonders if they should
check the home as well, but Foreman knows that Fletchers wife
is there. Chase wonders if shes hiding something. They check
the house and find nothing.
In Baltimore, House continues to hector Stacy about the crucifix.
She tells him to drop it. When she realizes that such an anomaly
is driving House crazy, she decides to torment him by keeping quiet.
Stacy finally blurts out that she and Mark had a fight, causing
her to rush out of the house prematurely. She is becoming aware
that Mark is slowly pushing her out of his life by constantly fighting
about nothing. Feeling guilty, House now tries to console her.
Cameron is summoned to Fletchers room. Hes in pain
and holding up a fork. She guesses that he has a metallic taste
in his mouth. Wilson calls Stacys cell looking for House.
He lets him know that Fletcher has a metallic taste and kidney failure.
House phones his now-stumped team. Foreman again suggests the lumbar
puncture, but House warns them that they have to do it perfectly.
He also chides the team for being too gentle with Fletcher. They
need to care him with the likelihood of death because its
the only way theyll get the truth.
Foreman and Chase meet with Fletcher and his wife to instill fear
into him. He denies holding anything back. Cameron performs the
LP. Fletcher quickly rolls over and tries to confess something to
her, but he only manages to say, I couldnt tackle the
bear! They took my stain!
At the airport, an announcement is made that no flights will be
arriving or departing until the next morning. Stacy, who booked
a room at the airport hotel, invites House because his leg cant
handle sleeping on a cot. Up in the room, House tries to find out
exactly where their relationship stands. She explains that theyre
like spicy curry: House is abrasive and strong like the chili peppers,
but no matter how much you love hot curry, it will eventually burn
your mouth. You avoid it for awhile until you start craving it again.
House and Stacy kiss.
The phone rings, and the doctors report that the LP showed an infection.
Cameron pipes up that Fletcher tried to confess something to her,
and House tries to figure out the meanings of bear and
stain. The word Fletcher actually wants to use could
be related to those words by meaning or by sounds. They could also
simply mean nothing.
The doctors begin throwing words at Fletcher to translate stain
and bear. Pain? Brain? Bare naked? Fletcher repeatedly shakes his
head. In Baltimore, House sits alone in an abandoned airport corridor.
Hes written Fletchers phrases on the wall and stares
at them, searching for a meaning. Stacy comes down to join him.
House calls the doctors to see what theyve learned. Cameron
points out that Fletcher mentioned stain once before, during the
MRI. She thinks maybe he can only tell them things when his wife
isnt in the room. The doctors wake Cuddy up so they can bring
her in to distract Fletchers wife.
Later that morning, Stacy finds House to let him know that his
plane has been boarding for 20 minutes. He ignores her and calls
the hospital, where hes patched through to Fletchers
room. He reiterates that they took his stain, and Foreman runs down
the list of words theyve assembled. Fletcher says yes to brain.
House has a realization bear means polar bear. Fletcher nods
that he is bipolar. That would explain the Topamax, the risky job
and the drug use.
House posits that Fletcher had to hide his bipolar disorder to
maintain his job. When he fell in love, he wanted that life and
was forced to make a change. House mentions bilateral cingulotomy,
a surgical procedure that some people claim helps mood disorders.
As House talks, Fletcher pounds the bed. House says that it wasnt
the surgery, but a bug Fletcher picked up on his trip to South America
for the surgery.
Fletchers wife slips into the room. She wants to know if
this is all true. House forges on and tells his team to get some
blood on a slide under a microscope. Foreman spots cerebral malaria.
Although a person with a microscope could have picked this up immediately,
computers cant. Foreman chides himself for the misstep. Cameron
tries to reassure him, saying they live in an electronic age.
At the airport, Stacy and House prepare to board their plane. Discussing
Fletchers case, they bring up that sometimes people want to
change so badly for love but simply cant. People also need
that love. So what to do?
- From Fox.com
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