Episode 21: Family
Aired 5/1/07
A 10-year old boy named Matty puts on a sterile hospital gown and
latex gloves. His mother Claudia does the same. She prepares Matty
to see his older brother, Nick, who just went through an extra course
of chemo and radiation for leukemia. When he enters the isolation
room, Matty is frozen by the sight of his bald brother. Wilson takes
Matty off for his own procedure -- a bone marrow donation. As Wilson
discusses the importance of the surgery, Matty sneezes. Wilson cant
do a transplant until he knows whats wrong with Matty.
The team gathers to discuss the case. Matty has an enlarged spleen
and fever. Even if this was just a basic cold, a bone marrow transplant
right now would kill Nick. Since the family is black, it is almost
impossible to find another donor. House suggests making Matty sicker
in order to induce the infection the become more prevalent and easier
to spot. Foreman disagrees, figuring they should check the family
home for environmental causes.
Foreman and Chase inspect the home. Still shaken by the death of
his last patient, Foreman asks Chase for advice on how to move forward
after botching a diagnosis. Chase replies that time eventually allows
you to stop thinking about it on a daily basis. Foreman argues that
Chase was distracted by the death of his father when he accidentally
killed a patient, whereas Foreman made a calculated decision. Chase
sees a rusted water pump in the backyard and he takes a water sample.
Perhaps Matty took a drink one day after playing baseball in the
backyard?
Back at the hospital, the doctors question Matty about the fountain.
He did drink from it once last summer, but the water was disgusting
and he never tasted it again. Matty also suffers from an acute scrotum.
House sees this as a positive sign because only a few infections
cause swollen testicles. He orders urinalysis and cultures for E.
Coli, klebsiella, TB and brucellosis. He also wants blood tests
for enteroviruses and adenobviruses.
The tests all come back negative, so Chase begins to wonder if
theyre on the wrong track. In their quest to make Matty sicker,
they might have inadvertently helped the infection spread to his
heart. Chase and Cameron perform a transesophogeal echo on Matty
and find a growth on the mitral valve. It will require at least
a months worth of antibiotics to clear that up. However, Nick
only has about four days to live.
House suggests removing the valve, but Chase doesnt think
the infection will clear the boys system in time. Foreman
believes that Matty will be fine with antibiotics and doesnt
need open heart surgery. House shifts gears, and decides they can
perform the valve surgery. Then they will harvest Mattys marrow,
stew it in the targeted antibiotic and replace it. Concerned about
this wild plan, Foreman announces that hes going to run it
by Cuddy.
After hearing the various arguments, Cuddy orders Wilson to simply
explain the choices to the parents. She asks House why he let Foreman
go far with his caution. House explains that he thought it would
be good for Foreman since he seems to now be frozen in his decision
making. He has the yips, much like how a great athlete might suddenly
lose his determination. Of course, House only plans on giving Foreman
four days before he fires him because one doesnt recover from
the yips.
Wilson breaks it down for the family. This procedure should work,
but due to the valve replacement, Matty would have to be on blood
thinners to prevent clots for the rest of his life. It would prevent
him from playing baseball due to the risk of hemorrhage. Wilson
advises them to protect the family as a whole and opt for surgery.
They consent and the surgery is begun.
That night, Wilson wakes up House. They biopsied a piece of the
valve before removal. It was fibrous tissue and not infectious.
Now they have to figure out what is turning Mattys healthy
heart tissue into gristle. Cameron thinks it could be autoimmune,
so House sends them off to figure out which one.
All tests for autoimmunity are negative. Whats worse is that
Nick is starting to deteriorate. His capillaries are leaking blood.
If that moves to the brain, hes dead. Cameron suggests going
with the 4 out of 6 level marrow match Foreman found in the registry.
House rejects that because he wants a 6 out of 6 level match.
Foreman, however, informs the family about the 4 out of 6 match
which gives Nick a chance. The parents are greatly encouraged. House
and Wilson later try to talk them out of it, but its no use
because they have made up their mind. Outside, House berates Wilson
for not having the courage to manipulate the parents into what the
doctors feel is the right decision. At least Foreman was doing what
he thinks is right.
The transplant is started on Nick. Foreman hooks up antibiotic
IVs to Matty. Later, Cameron checks up on Matty, who complains of
an itch. She sees blood dripping from his ear and calls House with
the news. Mattys not making new blood cells and his bone marrow
is crashing. House thinks they need to stop Mattys meds. If
he recovers, then the meds were the problem. If not, its the
infection. Matty is in worse shape than they thought.
House and Wilson return to the hospital and promptly learn that
Nick is suffering from a grade four Graft vs. Host issue. The new
marrow is killing him. House asks Foreman if hes feeling guilty,
but Foreman is adamant that he did the right thing.
Matty isnt improving, meaning that the infection is to blame.
House has an epiphany. If blood cells wont grow in Matty because
hes too weak, they should put Mattys blood in Nick and
see what happens. Maybe that will lead them to the infection in
question. Since Nick is going to die anyway, they can use his body
as a Petri dish to quickly tell them what the issue is. The doctors
dont see any other way.
Wilson presents this situation to the family. At first, they refuse
to accept that Nick is as good as dead, but House makes it clear
that theres no coming back for him. The only question, as
House sees it, is whether they leave the hospital with one dead
son or two. With Houses prompting, Wilson encourages the parents
to consent. Yet they say no. Theyre not giving up on Nick.
House is stumped. Foreman is ready to start testing Matty to learn
what infection he has. House scoffs that with 10,000 possible infections
and 20 minutes per test, itll take Foreman about eight years
to pinpoint the cause. Foreman counters that it will actually be
four months. Unless, of course, they get lucky and Foreman is right
with the first test.
Nick writhes in agony. House writes out a new prescription and
gives it to Nicks father, who runs off to get it filled. House
intentionally wanted to be alone with Nick. He explains that he
is dying, but Nick already knows that. House says that his life
doesnt have to be meaningless. He could save Matty.
Meanwhile, Wilson and Foreman churn through tests. Wilson tells
Foreman that House is going to fire him because he feels hes
gotten timid. Foreman couldnt care less about that right now.
He would rather focus on waterborne infections since Matty drank
from the old pump. Wilson wonders why a cookie cutter house in the
suburbs has an old fashioned hand pump in the yard. Foreman realizes
that this is rather odd.
Nick talks with his parents, trying to persuade them to let him
go in order to help Matty. He wants to do it for them so that they
wont be alone. The parents break down and consent. Before
they can wheel Nick away for the procedure, Foreman bursts in with
the news that they figured out whats infecting Matty. Hes
got a fungal infection called histoplasmosis. Its found in
chicken feces. The subdivision was built on top of old farmland,
and the pitchers mound that Matty built in the backyard must
have sat under a chicken coop back then. Matty inhaled some dust
and got infected. The bad news is that Matty doesnt have enough
marrow left for a transplant, even with treatment for the infection.
Foreman inserts a new IV into Matty and then makes a bold move.
He can access marrow from Mattys hip bone. Doctors dont
do that normally because its painful and dangerous to access.
He cant sedate Matty due to the infection and the boy will
only have a little marrow left after this. Yet Foreman proceeds
anyway. He straps Matty to the gurney and plunges a long needle
into his hip. The boy shrieks in pain and begs him to stop. Foreman
presses on.
His risk proves to be a success. Nick gets his transplant. The
parents are mad, but the end result quells that anger.
House has a conversation with Foreman to see how hes handling
all of this drama. Foreman is angst-ridden that he could listen
to Matty screaming in pain and never question whether he was doing
the right thing. He hates the idea that, in order to be like House
as a doctor, he needs to be like him as a person. Foreman gives
House his two weeks notice that he is quitting.
- From Fox.com
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