Episode 6: Que Sera Sera
Aired 11/07/06
Firefighters are called to the residence of George Hagel, a 600-pound
man who has died. As a team of firefighters tries to lift Georges
body, somebody in the room passes gas. That somebody is George.
The chief checks and finds that George still has a pulse.
Cuddy brings Georges file to Chase, Foreman and Cameron.
House isnt in yet. Cuddy informs the doctors that George is
in a coma, but his blood sugar is normal, his cholesterol is lower
than hers, his tox screen was clean and theres no sign of
trauma. The team is astonished by this news. Cuddy wonders where
House is.
Well, hes in a holding cell at the police station. Frustrated,
he tells Tritter to let him go. Tritter suggests arraigning him
instead. Finally, Wilson appears and posts Houses bail. House
meets Wilson outside and Wilson immediately hands him a bottle of
pills. House assures Wilson that hes innocent and Tritter
just wanted to punish him.
The doctors are mulling over Georges case and Houses
whereabouts when House suddenly pops into the office. House quickly
orders the team to start treating George for Pickwickian Syndrome.
Foreman counters that Georges CO2 and oxygen stats are normal,
but House points out that theyre only normal for an average-sized
person. House also wants a detailed medical history. Search his
house and talk to his neighbors if you need.
Georges neighbor, Sophie, allows Cameron into Georges
apartment. She surprised by how tidy and orderly the place. The
place also has a high-end kitchen, including a wine cellar. Sophie
informs Cameron that George loves cooking and frequently prepares
four-course gourmet meals for himself. He also has prostitutes visit
on occasion.
House is working clinic duty when he spots Tritter in the lobby.
Tritter says he was merely bringing Cuddy up to speed on the arrest.
Conspicuously popping a pill before Tritter, House advises him to
quit while hes ahead. Tritter eyes up House, then leaves.
Foreman and Cameron approach with the information that intubation
and steroids have had no effect on George. Thus, theyre ruling
out Pickwicks. House suggests blood clots in the brain and
orders either an MRI or a CT scan. Problem is, those machines have
weight limits well under what George weighs. House suggests that
they just start treatment then.
Knowing that blind treatment could possibly kill George, the team
tries to MRI him. Cameron thinks itll work if they just get
his head inside the machine, but Foreman worries that George will
break the table, ruining a million-dollar machine. Adamant that
George deserves the same standard of care as anybody else, Cameron
assembles a team of nurses to hoist George onto the table. Incidentally,
she lies about Georges weight to get them to help.
Cuddy finds House in his office and hands him contact information
for the best defense lawyer in the county. The moment she leaves,
House crumbles the paper and throws it out. Elsewhere, the doctors
find nothing out of the ordinary on Georges MRI. As they begin
to weigh their options, George comes to life and starts screaming.
As Foreman and Chase struggle to pull him out, the MRI bed breaks
with a loud crack.
House and the team reconvene to discuss what they know. They dont
know much. A calm, but angry, Cuddy enters asking about the machine.
House blames his staff for disobeying his orders to start treatment.
Cuddy isnt buying it, but Cameron pipes up and admits what
happened. Foreman wonders about hormones. Acute adrenal insufficiency
could possibly cause a coma. He wants to do an ACTH stimulation
test and check Georges skin for acanthosis nigricans. Cameron,
focusing on the prostitutes, wants to run a full STD check. Chase
suggests doing nothing, and if George doesnt get worse, figure
it was a hematoma that dissipated. House considers, then decide
to go with all of the theories.
Foreman and Cameron begin their tests on George, who insists hes
fine. Every doctor hes ever seen has checked his hormones,
then his blood pressure. And the results are always the same. He
asks the doctors when he can leave the hospital. Foreman and Cameron
finish the tests, then report back to House that the skin exam and
ACTH stimulation were normal, and the blood and urine were negative
for chlamydia, herpes and syphilis. House is intrigued by the mystery,
but Foreman then reports that George is asking to be discharged.
House shuffles over to Georges room, where he finds him eating
dinner. House tells George that he awoke from a coma caused by an
unknown condition and wanted to leave the hospital. So either George
isnt in his right mind or he knows what the condition is.
House guesses at various conditions, but George angrily insists
that he doesnt know whats wrong. Hes not depressed,
he just doesnt want to stay there. House gets a cell phone
call and leaves.
The call was about Houses apartment, which has been ransacked.
As he looks around, he sees Tritter in his hallway with two uniformed
officers. Tritter coolly informs House that theyre executing
a search warrant. Tritter holds up an evidence bag full of pills
and estimates that it must hold over six hundred Vicodin. Most DAs
would say that shows intent to traffic. House scoffs, pointing out
that each pill is held in a prescription bottle. Tritter agrees,
but theorizes that if House is so unprofessional and unethical,
maybe its possible that some of those bottles are in others
names. Or came from forged prescriptions. Or simply stolen. But
House has nothing to worry about, right?
The next morning, House instructs his team to send George home.
Cameron resists, but House is more interested in tracking down Wilson
and finding out what he told Tritter. Wilson assures House that
he merely told Tritter he prescribed the Vicodin.
As George is wheeled out of the hospital, Cameron makes a last
gasp attempt to convince him to stay. George explains that he simply
loves food. Whatever is going to happen, will happen. George stands
from his wheelchair and prepares to walk out of the hospital as
Cameron begs him to sit. George takes a few unsure steps and then
collapses through a plate glass wall.
Foreman, Cameron and House gather. Foreman explains that disorientation
and loss of balance could mean a neurofibromatosis. House mentions
that thats inherited, claiming one of his diagnoses was correct.
Cameron argues that the disorientation isnt a key symptom.
And she would know because
she gave George three grams of phenytoin.
She didnt think he should be discharged and knew that would
force him to stay.
Looking at the discharge report, House notices that George didnt
eat his breakfast, which seems odds for him. Coma, fever and loss
of appetite stem from Chagas. Cameron is doubtful, as George hasnt
been out of the country before. House points out that his food has.
House wants a sample of Georges CNS to determine which bugs
are in his brain. But since George is too big for an LP, theyll
have to drill into his head. After some badgering from Cameron,
George agrees to the test.
During the test, Foreman prods Georges brain and George begins
screaming that he cant see. The nurses struggle to hold him
down. After the procedure, Foreman and Cameron inform House that
theres no inflammation in the optic nerve and the retina is
intact. There was also no sign of Chagas. House wonders if they
missed a tumor in the MRI. Or perhaps its diabetes, as evidence
by the blindness and coma. He wants them to test George once more.
Cameron tries to give George some glucose water to drink, but he
angrily slaps it away. They argue until George says that hes
been fat all his life, but sick only recently. If she wants to look
for a disease that has nothing to do with his size, hell help
them. Otherwise, leave him alone.
House meets with his new lawyer, Howard Gemeiner. Howard advise
a plea bargain, which House has no interest in. So Howard quotes
House his exorbitant fees, which House reluctantly accepts. When
House returns to the hospital. Cameron asks how things went with
the lawyer. House is disappointed that his secret is out. Moving
on, Foreman says tests for MS were negative and Cameron says tests
for diabetes were unperformed.
House barges into Georges room and accosts him about the
diabetes test. House tries to forces the glucose drink on George,
who strenuously resists. As they struggle, House notices Georges
fingers. He limps out of the room. Cameron and Foreman follow. House
orders x-rays of Georges hands and feet. Then a bronchial
test, a sputum cytology and a CSF check for anti-hu antibodies.
House thinks George has lung cancer. When the doctors are skeptical,
House asks if theyve felt Georges fingers. His hands
are clubbed.
They take x-rays and are stunned when they realize House was right.
George has ossifying periostitis on the ends of his fingers. After
the tests are analyzed, Cameron enters Georges room to tell
him theyve confirmed small cell lung carcinoma. That caused
a paraneoplastic neurologic syndrome, which in turn caused the coma
and blindness. Its inoperable, but radiation treatment is
available. However, that will only buy him a few months. A year
at the most.
In Wilsons hotel room that night, Tritter is asking Wilson
if he really wrote all of those prescriptions for House. Wilson
admits that House can difficult, but he truly is in pain and needs
that medicine, which is why Wilson prescribed it. Tritter pulls
out a few scrips and shows them to Wilson. He points out that the
signatures on some of them look different from others. Tritter notes
that Wilson looks surprised. Covering, Wilson says that sometimes
he gets bored and signs his name differently. Tritter tells Wilson
hell give a second to reconsider his answer. Because if hes
lying, theyll find out. Wilson sticks to his story. Tritter
thanks him and leaves.
- From Fox.com
|