Episode 18: Airborne
Aired 4/10/07
Fran is a seemingly conservative, middle-aged woman. She collects
porcelain figurines and wears a cable-knit sweater. Fran welcomes
a woman named Robin into her home. Robin is a prostitute. When Fran
sees the womans revealing outfit, she becomes dizzy and faints.
Robin calls an ambulance.
As Robin stands nearby, Wilson examines Fran. He finds a motion
sickness patch on her neck. Fran assumes that she forgot to take
it off after a trip to see her sister in Duluth. Wilson informs
her that scopolamine can cause dizziness and blurred vision, and
the blackout most likely occurred when she conked her head on the
floor. As she is being discharged, Fran falls to the floor in a
seizure.
After she is readmitted, Wilson notices a fresh tattoo on Frans
leg. He questions whether she really went to Duluth. Fran confesses
that, when she recently turned the same age her mother died at,
she decided on a whim to visit Caracas. While there, she got a tattoo,
drank, partied and had sex with a stranger.
Wilson presents Chase, Cameron and Foreman with Frans new
case study and a litany of potential diseases. Wilson orders them
to get a tox screen, chem 20, STD panel, blood cultures, a CT scan
and to also check Frans house for possible environmental causes.
Meanwhile, House is wheeled onto an airplane in Singapore with
Cuddy. His vinters cane -- which hides a corkscrew -- was
confiscated by security. Cuddy laments the incredible room charges
House accumulated in a Singapore hotel. He defends himself by explaining
that she shouldnt have dragged him across the globe simply
for a three-minute speech, even though it acquired Princeton-Plainsboro
WHO accreditation.
On the flight, the man across from House seems ill. The man named
Peng groans and then vomits on his food. Keo, the flight attendant,
asks if anybody speaks Korean or is a doctor. House gets up, and
then walks to the back of the plane to get Cuddy.
Cuddy is worried that Peng is suffering from meningococcus. The
whole plane could end up infected and she thinks they need to turn
around immediately. House, having noticed Pengs medic alert
bracelet, passes it off as a mere allergic reaction. Moments later,
another passenger named Joy starts to vomit. House figures it was
just the smell of Pengs vomit that made her sick. Yet when
he lifts up Joys shirt, he sees that her back is covered with
the same nasty rash that plagued Peng. House becomes officially
concerned.
House heads to the front of the cabin and begins writing various
symptoms on the movie screen as if it was his white board. Cuddy
informs House that the plane has passed the halfway mark, and they
are now at least six hours from landing. House asks Keo about the
dinner menu. Peng had eaten sea bass and Joy had seafood kabobs,
which contained sea bass. House declares that they are suffering
from ciguatera poisoning, which is an instant-onset toxin claiming
all of the symptoms House scribbled on the board. House gets on
the PA system and asks everybody who had the sea bass to go into
the bathrooms and vomit as soon as possible because it should keep
the effects of the toxin to a minimum. Cuddy then whispers to House
that meningococcus still makes just as much sense. House admits
that shes right.
Pengs health worsens. If they soon start seeing neurological
symptoms, they will all be in trouble. Testing for ataxia, House
indicates to Peng that he should stand up and walk toward him. Pengs
legs lock and he falls to the ground.
House examines Pengs leg and sees that its thin, probably
from a recent break. He declares that Peng has radiation poisoning
from the x-rays. He tells Joy that shes pregnant. All of the
symptoms fit both diagnoses. Suddenly, Cuddy doubles over and vomits.
House finds a fierce rash on her back as well. She didnt even
have the fish.
Back in Princeton, the team comes up with negative results for
all of Frans tests. However, her seizures have slowed since
the doctors put a motion sickness patch back on. They were concerned
the scopolamine was controlling her symptoms. Wilson realizes that
she is suffering from breast cancer. Since she was on vacation,
he assumed that Fran had an exotic problem. But the inflammation
triggered by the paraneoplastic syndrome caused by cancer can be
reduced by the anticholinergics found in motion sickness patches.
Cameron performs a mammogram on Fran when she begins blinking.
She cant see out of her right eye. The doctors perform a Visual
Evoked Response test with a dozen electrical anodes attached to
Frans forehead. Various patterns shine on a screen in front
of her.
In the skies at the same time, House shines a flashlight in Cuddys
face. Agitated, she waves the light away, then declares she has
photophobia, a symptom of meningitis. Keo comes into the cabin with
word that three more passengers are sick. House walks through the
cabin with a young patient in an attempt to collect any medications
that passengers might be carrying.
In the hospital, Foreman and Cameron note a spike on Frans
EEG in her left eye. She falls into a coma. The team bickers about
how to proceed. Foreman insists she has a cranial bleed that the
CT missed and that they need to create a burr hole immediately to
relieve the pressure. Cameron, doubtful the test would miss it,
suggests an LP to confirm the presence of red blood cells. She asks
Chase what he thinks and he agrees with her. Foreman rolls his eyes,
growing tired of their relationship causing Chase to always agree
with Cameron. Wilson decides to play it safe and go with the LP
first.
Cameron and Chase prepare Fran for the LP. House is preparing to
do the same on Peng, but with much more meager supplies. A syringe
with plunger removed, a plastic shot glass and an alcohol swab.
The needles are inserted in each patients back. House collects
the liquid that drains out in a shot glass. Chase does the same,
only into a sterile test tube.
House hasnt found much in his pill collection, but there
are three tablets of augmentin. Cuddy wants them given to Peng because
hes in the worst shape, but House reminds her that hes
allergic to penicillin. If he has a reaction, he dies and theyve
wasted the pills. House then realizes that Cuddy is right.
House studies the liquid from Pengs spinal column and his
face drops. Ignoring Cuddys frantic pleas to know what it
is, House heads to the main cabin and informs the passengers that
they have a confirmed case of bacterial meningitis. Peng will not
survive and its likely that several others have also been
infected. Anybody who feels the various symptoms needs to come to
the first class cabin for isolation. The passengers start to panic.
House warns them that they all dont actually have meningitis,
but are merely suffering from mass hysteria.
He pleads for everybody to calm down so that their imagined symptoms
will soon disappear. House returns to the first-class cabin and
tells Cuddy that the clear LP fluid confirmed his thoughts. Her
rage, a symptom of mass hysteria, gave rise to a new theory. However,
Peng is still dying and House has absolutely no idea why.
House scribbles new symptoms down on the movie screen and convenes
three passengers to play the roles of Foreman, Chase and Cameron
and run through the differential with him. Cuddy mentions syphilis.
Thinking of condoms makes House realize Peng has focal limb paralysis.
Peng may have swallowed cocaine-filled condoms as a courier, and
the drug might be spreading through his digestive tract. They need
to operate.
In order to perform surgery on Peng, House asks if any passengers
snuck a knife on board. A man reluctantly admits that he has a ceramic
knife which wasnt sensed by the metal detectors. Houses
new team helps pin Peng to the floor as he prepares a pair of gloves,
three plastic spoons, four alcohol wipes, a small pair of pliers
and a sewing kit.
The 12-year old boy assisting House presses down on Pengs
shoulder, which seems to relieve the patients pain. Noticing
that pressure on Pengs joints relieves pain, House realizes
hes wrong about the cocaine. They need to find Pengs
wallet.
House uncovers what hes looking for in the wallet -- a receipt
from a scuba rental shop. Peng has the bends. They need the pilot
to descend under 5,000 feet as quickly as possible and drop the
oxygen masks.
Back in the hospital, Fran is wheeled into surgery with her head
shaved. Chase and Cameron watch from another room. He thinks their
relationship is actually affecting their work. They even had sex
in Frans bedroom while checking for environmental causes.
Cameron mocks Chase for being worried about Frans cat watching
them. This triggers a revelation for Chase. Fran hasnt eaten
anything since entering the hospital. He rushes off.
Chase re-inspects Frans home. The cat is now dead, although
its food bowl is still full. The surgery team prepares to drill
into Frans head and Foreman peels back a section of her scalp,
exposing the skull. In Frans driveway, Chase finds a pipe
that leads to the house next door. Tacked to the front door of the
next house is a notice that the place has been fumigated with methyl
bromide. Chase quickly calls the hospital and tells them to stop
surgery.
The doctors explain to Fran that fifty years ago, her home was
one estate. The two homes shared an electrical system. Unfortunately,
the exterminator didnt realize that. When it was fumigated,
the poison gas flowed through the electrical conduit into her home.
She will need to stay in the hospital for a few more days, but ultimately
shell be fine.
The flight finally touches down in New York. Keo slyly lets House
know that she is in New York every Monday.
Wilson calls the prostitute Robin to let her know that Fran will
be fine. Then he asks if she might be coming back to visit.
As they leave the hospital that night, Chase tells Cameron that
he wants their relationship to be a little more normal. He doesnt
want simple sex any more. Cameron reminds him thats what he
signed up for originally. If hes no longer game, its
over.
- From Fox.com
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