When the camera pans to show the ongoing surgery, you can clearly see the abdominal apparatus is sitting far above where it should be, and it would be anatomically impossible for her to be laying at that angle. Quotes Dr. Soundtracks Dr. House - Titelsong uncredited. User reviews 3 Review.
Top review. Ethics be darned. It's amazing how little cursing but so much blood and gore are featured on HOUSE, especially as the mood darkens on the show in the second season. This particularly graphic episode deals with a young woman in need of a new liver, and the issue of whether her girlfriend should donate a piece of her compatible liver in light of certain private information House and his team possess. Absolutely nobody comes off looking good in this episode, and this includes the two women, both of whom are painted in less than flattering tones.
The always-idealistic Cameron learns a hard lesson by tale's end, but it's for the better. Roomies Wilson and House by now have become the new Oscar and Felix, and their sophomoric antics help lighten things a bit.
Details Edit. Release date April 18, United States. United States. English Mandarin. Technical specs Edit. Runtime 44 minutes. Foreman wants to restart her heart to test it, but House suggests surgery to look at the pulmonary vein directly. As Amber's condition deteriorates, Thirteen begins to act strangely, which prompts House to confront her about not participating in the differentials.
House tells her to get over whatever her problem is so she can stop hesitating and do her job. Just as they are about to start surgery, they find Amber is exhibiting jaundice. The liver failure shows that diet pills aren't responsible, so they return her to intensive care. House saw sherry in his dream with Amber, and Kutner remembers that there is a Sharrie's Bar near the site of the bus crash. Wilson and House go to the bar, and the bartender gives House back his keys.
House starts asking about Amber, and the bartender tells him that she sneezed and that they were drinking together.
House thinks the sneezing points to an infection. Kutner tells Thirteen that he went through what Wilson is facing. His parents were killed in a store robbery when he was very young. House decides that Amber may have had hepatitis and orders interferon. Foreman goes to tell Wilson and tells House to get some sleep.
However, House has another dream, and Amber starts speaking to him again, telling him that hepatitis can't be the right diagnosis.
She then shows House her back. House wakes up again and tells his team to turn Amber over. They notice a rash on her back that indicates that she might have the flu. Wilson is wondering exactly how House saw the rash. Once again, House has to confront Thirteen about her hesitance. They think it might be Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever , but after they treat her with antibiotics, they have to warm her back up to test their theory.
Wilson objects. House orders blood cultures , but Foreman objects because treatment would be faster. House overrules him. House goes to see Thirteen again to see why she is screwing up. He thinks it's because of her refusal to deal with the possibility of having Huntington's disease. Foreman is concerned about Amber, and goes to Cuddy. Cuddy goes in and starts warming Amber up. Wilson objects vehemently as he sees a drop in brain function on the EEG.
He accuses Cuddy and Foreman of letting whatever is wrong with her spread to her brain. House thinks it might be an autoimmune disease. He wants to give her prednisone and warm her back up. Wilson objects again, but Cuddy tells Wilson he's the family, not the attending. House apologizes to Wilson, but agrees with Cuddy. Wilson comes back to apologize, but asks House to go through deep electrical brain stimulation to attempt to restore his memory.
House realizes he will be risking his own life again, but agrees. Chase starts the procedure on House. Because House's team is not called in every day, and House himself keeps the interaction with patients to a minimum, it comes as something of a surprise to hear that House apparently visits the Human Resources department two times every day on average. Visiting HR on a frequent basis makes a lot of sense for the character, but twice a day?
Even if we take this as slightly exaggerated, it seems a bit impossible. In the season two episode, "Distractions," we first meet House's old schoolmate, Philip Weber.
The two immediately clash, based on years of old grudges and resentment. In the past, Weber discovered that House was copying one of his exam answers. Almost immediately, he turned House in - which resulted in his expulsion and cost him a prestigious internship. Weber took the internship for himself, and House has never forgiven him. House is so intelligent that one has to wonder why he would cheat on a test.
Weber says House was known for cutting corners, but that seems hard to believe considering how in-depth and relentless House can be when it comes to treating the sick. House breaks a lot of rules - but sometimes, that rampant rule-breaking moves into breaking the actual law. In season three, a series of events leads to House being caught with illegal medication by Detective Tritter.
This soon gets amped up to a charge of trafficking narcotics when excessive amounts are discovered in his apartment. By the finale of this story arc, House manages to get away without having to do any jail time - just going to rehab - and Detective Tritter disappears from his radar. The circumstances that lead to this, and the final conclusion of the judge presiding over House's case with Tritter, are shaky at best - but House keeps getting away with things.
When we are first introduced to House, we're not given a complete explanation as to what actually happened to his leg, but in the masterful episode "Three Stories," we finally get the full account of the infarction, and painful aftermath. We learn that Stacy, acting as House's medical proxy while he was in a coma, opted to have House's leg muscle removed because House continued to refuse amputation. House's resentment and anger ultimately collapsed their relationship - but Stacy only tried to do what he wanted and also somehow find a middle ground.
He's still not over it when she finds him again and asks him to treat her new husband. As per the previous entry in this list, the injury to House's leg takes place before the series begins. In all the time since then, House is miserably bitter about the incident, often using it as an excuse to lash out at the people around him and take so many painkillers that he can hardly see straight.
Even though he eventually gets over his resentment to Stacy and is able to move on, it still takes him six whole seasons of the show in the episode "Help Me" to finally admit that he should have had his leg amputated from the beginning.
If he had, he would have saved himself all this pain. For such a brilliant doctor who is troubled by so much pain, why couldn't he come to this conclusion sooner? Apart from generally keeping his interactions with real patients to an absolute minimum, House causes a great deal of other problems for Cuddy and the hospital. Not only should he be doing significantly more clinic duty - or at least, some actual clinic duty - but he is abrasive and rude to everyone around him, causing the many complaints to HR that we mentioned before.
Add to that his salary, which must be fairly large, and all the medications that he uses, and House must surely be more trouble than he's worth to keep on.
We all have a birthday, even if we choose not to celebrate it. While Gregory House may seem like the kind of guy to let a date like that go unnoticed so that he can avoid having to socialize further with the people around him, he must surely know what the actual date of his birth is, right?
When House became disabled and his girlfriend Stacy Warner left him, Wilson started spending more time with House and less with Bonnie. However, Wilson bounced back again — he married a third time to Julie who has never been seen in the series. The hospital is soon in turmoil when it obtains a new benefactor and chairman, Edward Vogler , who insists that all the departments be profitable. For his trouble, Wilson is voted off the board, and is forced to consider resigning his position at the hospital to avoid further damage to his career.
Wilson is soon restored to his job. Wilson is brought into action when Stacy returns and it appears House wants to rekindle their relationship despite her marriage. He confronts her and reminds her of the damage she did to House the last time she left. Although House and Stacy have a brief affair, House decides to end it.
Wilson also finds out that House borrowed money from him to buy a motorcycle even though House had enough money already. House admits that he borrowed the money to see how much he could borrow before Wilson refused. Fearing that his wife is angry with him for his latest infidelity, he instead finds out that she has been cheating on him.
Wilson does manage a personal accomplishment. With House out with a patient and helping Wilson to keep Cuddy playing poker instead of checking out his activities, Wilson manages to win the oncology benefit poker tournament by slow playing a pair of pocket aces and beating a pair of kings. After House returns from his convalescence after being shot and having treatment that removes his leg pain, he takes on the case of a former cancer patient who is confined to a wheelchair.
However, Cuddy refuses permission, only to give the patient the shot herself. As if by a miracle, the patient immediately improves, showing House was right. Wilson refuses, figuring that House is merely suffering aches and pains from overdoing his rehabilitation. The deception soon turns into a disaster. A police detective takes an interest in House after he sees House taking Vicodin in the clinic.
He soon finds the faked prescriptions and asks Wilson about them. Wilson tries to get Allison Cameron to sign off on his prescriptions, but when House calls her away to work on his case, Wilson instead gives up his oncology practice. Wilson accompanies House on a trip to Atlantic City with a former coma patient who House has temporarily revived.
Instead, House turns the deal down flat. In order to keep the pressure on House, Cuddy and Wilson conspire to cut House off of Vicodin completely until he agrees to the deal. Instead House steals drugs from a patient and, even though Wilson reverses himself and stops cooperating, House nearly goes to jail until Cuddy perjures herself to convince the court the stolen drugs were only a placebo. Wilson has to intervene once again when he realizes House is plotting to get nerve tissue from a patient who is insensitive to pain in an attempt to graft the nerve cells to his own.
While House is away, Wilson takes over the team when a middle aged woman collapses in her own home. Fortunately, Chase comes through with the right diagnosis. House finally relents when he takes a lengthy period of time to solve a case. After the fellowship derby, House is sure that Wilson is not only dating someone, but someone House knew personally. Wilson's relationship with Amber Volakis came as a surprise to everyone, including Wilson and Amber themselves.
Wilson realized that because Amber shared many characteristic with his best friend that they might be able to have the same type of lasting relationship. He later admitted to House that one of the reasons he liked Amber so much was because, like House, she was so much fun to be with.
He also enjoyed the fact that she was much more assertive than he was. On Amber's part, she had deep seated feelings of inadequacy that drove her to demand respect and to excel to get that respect. In Wilson, she found someone who could both respect her and find her attractive and desirable at the same time. Unfortunately, the relationship ended in tragedy when Amber died as a result of kidney failure due to the pills she was taking for the flu. She was transferred to another hospital under the name "Jane Doe" but once House realized Amber was the dying patient, she was sent to PPTH where House and his team tried to save her life with little success.
Amber was put on life support, eventually succumbing to the organ damage but not before she said goodbye to Wilson. In an attempt to reconnect with Wilson, House hires Lucas Douglas , a private detective.
Lucas soon finds out that Wilson has stayed connected with everyone at the hospital except House. House once again tries to confront Wilson about this, but Wilson blows him off again. He soon realized after the trip that he hadn't had any fun since Amber died until he and House were back together again. They soon reconciled and Wilson returned to his old job. After Lawrence Kutner dies, House starts hallucinating a vision of Amber and finally turns to Wilson for help.
House quickly detoxes from Vicodin, but refuses to deal with his underlying issues. Nolan and tries to enlist Wilson in the attempt. However, Wilson refuses to cooperate. House is soon reinstated and back doing diagnostic medicine. Wilson is astounded when House tries to re-form his old team, and is even more astounded when he succeeds.
House is there for the rehabilitation as well, and Wilson soon regrets his decision when the friend goes back to his new girlfriend instead of his ex-wife. Wilson remains supportive, even moving into a larger condo in order to give House more living space.
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