Episode 4: Lines in the Sand
Aired 9/26/06
A man named Dominic tries to teach his severely autistic son, Adam,
to identify shapes and words. Adam doesnt speak and does not
have much success identifying the images. Adam begins clutching
his chest and screaming frantically.
House is curious about Adams case. He finds it interesting
that, in the ten years of closely caring for their boy who screams
frequently, this is the first time the parents have admitted him
to the hospital. Foreman and the other doctors simply dismiss the
case, citing Adams severe affliction and his parents
natural overprotective nature. House orders a stool sample to check
for parasites, a blood culture to rule out infection and an ANA
for lupus.
House barges into Cuddys office and demands his old, bloodstained
carpet which she had replaced. She turns him down. House refuses
to use his office.
Foreman and Cameron strap a struggling Adam into a scanner for
his first test. The ventilation scan is normal so Adam can be sent
home. Yet House wants a fecal smear test. The boys parents tell
Foreman that they may have overreacted. Adam begins to gag and cough
before spraying mucus out of his mouth. Foreman is now convinced
that something is wrong.
Avoiding his own office, House convenes a team meeting in Wilsons
office. He orders an echocardiogram and antibiotics if the fluid
returns. Adam screams maniacally as Foreman tries to administer
the echo. The echo and an EKG confirm a conduction abnormality.
Chase, thinking about the effusion, suggests they look for something
that explains both the heart and lung problems. House wonders if
cancer is present and he calls for a lung biopsy.
Foreman approaches Wilson about Adams case. There is pleural
effusion and conduction abnormality, but an absence of heart failure.
He asks Wilson the oncologist if they should perform a lymph node
biopsy, and Wilson agrees. During the biopsy, Adam screams once
again and the doctors arent able to hold a gas mask over his
face for anesthetization. House comes in and takes a few breaths
from the mask himself. This makes Adam accept the mask. He slowly
falls under. His parents think its a miracle that their boy
finally had some kind of conversation with somebody. House dismisses
it as simple copycat behavior.
Wilson studies the biopsy. He doesnt find cancer, but he
does make an astonishing discovery. The cells under Adams
arm are liver cells. The team meets once again in Wilsons
office to figure out a possible explanation. House focuses on liver
damage, specifically cirrhosis. The team refutes because the echo
showed no scarring on the liver and other tests were negative. House
theorizes that damaged liver cells -- like cancer cells -- could
work their way into the bloodstream and move north. He suggests
that perhaps the parents who have been devastated by such a difficult
child might have slipped something to him. House wants a liver biopsy
to confirm cirrhosis.
Tired of finding House in his office, Wilson corners Cuddy and
begs her to put the dirty carpet back. When she refuses, House camps
out in her office to discuss Adams stool sample with Foreman.
It had traces of iron, zinc and calcium carbonate. House is intrigued
by the carbonate, which is an anti-diarrheal.
Adam is rushed to the cardiac ICU where he must be shocked back
to life. His liver is damaged, his heart has abnormal pathways and
pleural effusion has compromised his lung function. Yet the biopsy
was negative for cirrhosis. House still suspects the parents but
notes that Adam has pica, which means he will eat anything put in
front of him. House asks Foreman to inspect the home for matches,
spiders, mortar and anything suspicious that Adam would put in his
mouth.
After a thorough search of the home, Foreman informs House that
he found a small patch of Jimson Weed in the backyard. Jimson Weed
contains atropine, which is the poor mans acid. It explains
the pleural effusion and the arrhythmias. Yet the treatment for
that is physostigmine, which doesnt mix with heart issues.
They need to be sure before proceeding.
House shows Adam a picture of Jimson Weed and asks if he ate it.
Adam instead points to a picture of his sandbox and then his eyes
roll back into his head. House presents the new symptom to his team.
Foreman wonders if there are tumors, but the team is skeptical that
they would have missed that. Foreman plans on performing a CT scan.
If that doesnt work, hell remove the eye.
House sits in Adams empty hospital room, thinking. When he
sees the picture of the sandbox and a chalkboard with wavy lines,
something hits him. He rushes to the prep room and calls of Foremans
surgery. House has them darken the room so that he can examine Adams
eyes with a light. Since Adam cant speak normally, he drew
squiggly lines over and over again to explain what he was seeing.
Worms swimming in his eye. A raccoon used Adams sandbox for
litter and Adam ate what it left behind. The worms spread from his
stomach to the rest of his body into the liver, the lungs and the
eye. Laser photocoagulation will fix the eye, and a high dose of
benzimidazole will kill the worms.
Wilson enters Cuddys office with a medical textbook. Aspergers
Syndrome is a mild and rare form of Autism. It is typically characterized
by difficulty establishing friendships and playing with peers, trouble
accepting conventional social rules and they dislike any change
in setting or routine, he reads. Cuddy scoffs at the notion
that House has Aspergers, but Wilson mentions the fuss over
the change in carpet. He theorizes that House took Adams case
because he saw himself in the boy.
Wilson later finds House in the hallway and tells him that he knows
he doesnt suffer from Aspergers. He wishes he did because
it would free him from any social responsibility. Instead, he has
to face the fact that hes simply a jerk. Adam and his parents
are leaving the hospital, and Adam stops to give his cherished PSP
to House. Adam looks straight at House, making eye contact for the
first time in his life.
That night, House watches as a carpenter unrolls his old bloody
carpet in his office.
- From Fox.com
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