![]() ![]() He orders that the immunosuppressants be discontinued so they can take new blood tests. House realizes they have to stop the patient's immunosuppressive drugs in order to do a proper cancer work up. House finds Cuddy and Cameron together and tells Cameron to get back to the patient's case.Īfter the successful transplant, the team goes back to the differential. The girlfriend goes into cardiac arrest, but is revived. Cuddy tells her to write another article, and wait to get back at Foreman when he needs a reference. Cameron changes the subject and tells Cuddy about Foreman stealing her article. Just before the patient is about to confess to the girlfriend, House anesthetizes her. House realizes Cameron is alone with the patient and the girlfriend. The transplant is ready to go ahead, but the tests on the patient are all turning out negative. However, House tells Wilson that Foreman would have done it anyway. Wilson tells him that he has to deal with these problems, or else his team will be at each other's throats. Wilson comes to House over Foreman's article. The patient asks Cameron if she were in the same situation, whether she would tell if it meant she would die. ![]() Cuddy does so, and the girlfriend still wants to proceed.Ĭameron proceeds with the testing, and asks the patient how she can proceed with the transplant without telling her girlfriend how she feels. Cuddy agrees not to press House about what the interests are, and agrees to advise the girlfriend about the risks of the procedure. However, House goes to Cuddy to tell them the patient and girlfriend have differing interests. House orders as many relevant tests as possible, and warns Cameron not to tell the girlfriend. However, this will only give them an extra 36 hours. The girlfriend agrees to donate a part of hers. House tells the patient her liver is failing. House realizes the girlfriend could donate her liver (they are the same blood type), but the team is opposed based on the fact the patient wants to break up the relationship. Furthermore, the medical team can‘t test for anything in the approximate six hours Hannah has left to live. She is in need of a transplant, but she can't get one without a diagnosis of what caused the liver failure. Foreman enters the patient's room and tells the couple that Hannah's liver is failing. They concentrate on the sleep disorder and the internal bleeding. Cameron then notices the patient has a large contusion. House agrees to an allergy scratch test.ĭuring the test, the patient admits that she wants to break up with Max. The patient obviously lied about being allergic to the dog, because the drugs for her poison ivy would have taken care of the allergies as well. Hannah and Max did have a dog for a week, and House realizes Hannah wants to leave her girlfriend because having the dog would indicate a long term relationship. Chase suggests rabies, but there doesn't seem to be any exposure source. All of a sudden, the patients eyes go into rapid-eye-movement, such as occurs during sleep, even though her eyes were open and she was sitting up. House tells her that Foreman just did what was best for him.Ĭhase starts a biopsy of the patient's nasal tissues. He orders corticosteroids and tests.Ĭameron confronts House about allowing Foreman to scoop her on the article. House suspects granulomatosis with polyangiitis. ![]() The possibility of Hannah being exposed to poison ivy arises. The team starts discussing what could cause such a massive nosebleed and the nasal epithelium in her large intestine. The patient goes into respiratory arrest and starts bleeding from her nose. Suddenly, the patient develops rectal bleeding.Ĭameron and Chase do a colonoscopy on the patient without an anesthetic in order to keep her awake and test for a tumor in her colon. The patient doesn't realize when she's asleep. Since the tests show no problems, House orders that they keep Hannah awake by putting her under stress, therefore making her sicker. House thinks it is an optic nerve disease that is interfering with Hannah's light exposure cues.įoreman and Cameron go to examine the patient's retina and optical pressure, and notice that she is sleeping for very short periods. While Cameron and Foreman argue about the dilemma, House admits he signed Foreman's article, but didn't read it. He finds Foreman and Cameron arguing about Foreman stealing an article from Cameron (about the case in Autopsy). However, House is intrigued that the patient took a whole bottle of sleeping pills and still couldn't sleep. Cuddy comes to him with the patient's case, but House thinks its a psychiatric problem and explains the insomnia as a lie. Meanwhile, House is taking the opportunity to catch a nap while on clinic duty. Hannah, a woman who has not slept in ten days takes a whole bottle of sleeping pills and her partner calls an ambulance. ![]()
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