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Watch House Pilot Season 1 Episode 1 online in HD on Dailymotion.
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00:02Music
00:08Music
00:09Music
00:09Music
00:11Music
00:13Music
00:38Music
00:38Music
00:38Music
00:38Music
00:38Music
00:38Music
00:44why are you late you're not gonna like the answer i already know the answer i missed the bus i
00:50don't
00:50doubt it no bus stops near bravs you spent the night the alarm didn't work or maybe it did
00:55i didn't sleep with him girl i mean there's something there's something either very wrong
01:00with you there's something very wrong with you there's nothing wrong with him please tell me
01:04you know that for a fact mommy i gotta go you're lying aren't you i wouldn't lie to you good
01:09morning
01:10guys everybody's in their seats okay sydney why don't you tell us what you did this weekend
01:23come on sydney we know you're not shy how come we always have to tell you what we did and
01:29you don't
01:29tell us what you did okay i had a really great weekend but you can't tell miss melanie okay what
01:39did you do i made a new friend it's so much fun to make new friends isn't it yeah yeah
01:46did you tell
01:48your mom and dad about your new friend absolutely you should never keep anything from your parents
02:24and i told mine
02:25P-A-L-H-E, the!
02:33We know that word, the!
02:5929-year-old female, first seizure one month ago, lost the ability to speak, babbled like a baby, aggressive deterioration
03:06of mental status.
03:07See that? They all assume that I'm impatient because of this cane.
03:11So put on a white coat like the rest of us.
03:12I don't want him to think I'm a doctor.
03:14You see where the administration might have a problem with that attitude?
03:17People don't want a sick doctor.
03:19That's fair enough. I don't like healthy patients.
03:22The 29-year-old female...
03:23The one who can't talk? I like that part.
03:26She's my cousin.
03:28And her cousin doesn't like the diagnosis.
03:31I wouldn't either.
03:32Brain tumor. She's gonna die. Boring.
03:37I wonder you're such a renowned diagnostician.
03:40You don't need to actually know anything to figure out what's wrong.
03:42You're the oncologist. I'm just a lowly infectious disease guy.
03:45Yes, just a simple country doctor.
03:47Brain tumors at her age are highly unlikely.
03:49She's 29. Whatever she's got is highly unlikely.
03:52The protein markers for the three most prevalent brain cancers
03:54came out negative.
03:55It's an HMO lab.
03:57That's why I've sent it to a high school kid with a chemistry set.
03:59No family history?
04:01I thought your uncle died of cancer.
04:03The other side. No environmental factors that you know of.
04:06And she's not responding to radiation treatment.
04:08None of which is even close to this positive.
04:10All it does is raise one question.
04:13Your cousin goes to an HMO?
04:15Come on.
04:17I'll leave all the fun for the car.
04:19What's the point of putting together a team if you're not going to use them?
04:23You've got three overqualified doctors working for you.
04:26Getting bored.
04:28Getting bored.
04:28Getting bored.
04:43Getting bored.
04:57You'll get bored.
04:58I think she's still being prowwhich псих.ám
05:29It's a lesion.
05:32And the big green thing in the middle of the bigger blue thing on a map is an island.
05:37I was hoping for something a bit more creative.
05:40Shouldn't we be speaking to the patient before we start diagnosing?
05:43Is she a doctor?
05:44No, but everybody lies.
05:47Dr. Haas doesn't like dealing with patients.
05:49Isn't treating patients why we became doctors?
05:51No, treating illnesses is why we became doctors.
05:54Treating patients is what makes most doctors miserable.
05:56So you're trying to eliminate the humanity from the practice of medicine?
06:00If we don't talk to them, they can't lie to us.
06:02And we can't lie to them.
06:04Humanity is overrated.
06:06I don't think it's a tumor.
06:07First year of medical school, if you hear hoofbeats, you think horses, not zebras?
06:11Are you in first year of medical school?
06:14No.
06:15First of all, there's nothing on the CAT scan.
06:17Second of all, if this is a horse, then her kindly family doctor in Trenton makes the obvious diagnosis that
06:22it never gets near this office.
06:24Differential diagnosis, people.
06:26If it's not a tumor, what are the suspects?
06:28Why couldn't she talk?
06:30Aneurysm, stroke, or some other ischemic syndrome?
06:33Get her a contrast MRI.
06:34Crossfield-Jacob disease?
06:36Mad cow.
06:37Mad zebra.
06:38Wernicke's encephalopathy.
06:39No.
06:40Blood thymine level was normal.
06:42Lab and Trenton could have screwed up the blood test.
06:45I assume it's the corollary of people lie that people screw up.
06:49Redraw the blood tests and get her scheduled for that contrast MRI ASAP.
06:53Let's find out what kind of zebra we're treating here.
07:08Radiology, please call the page.
07:10Radiology, please call the page.
07:16Respiratory therapy to the art of death.
07:18I was expecting you in my office 20 minutes ago.
07:20Really?
07:21Well, that's odd, because I had no intention of being in your office 20 minutes ago.
07:24You think we have nothing to talk about?
07:25No, we just can't think of anything I'd be interested in.
07:27I signed your paychecks.
07:28I have tenure.
07:32Are you going to grab my cane now and stop me from leaving?
07:34That would be juvenile.
07:41I can still fire you if you're not doing your job.
07:43I'm here from 9 to 5.
07:44Your billings are practically non-existent.
07:46Rough year.
07:47You ignore requests for consults.
07:48I call back sometimes under style.
07:50You're six years behind on your obligations to this clinic.
07:53I was right.
07:53This doesn't interest me.
07:55Six years times three weeks.
07:57You owe me better than four months.
07:58It's 5 o'clock.
07:59I'm going home.
08:02To what?
08:04Nice.
08:07Look.
08:08Dr. House, the only reason why I don't fire you
08:11is because your reputation is still worth something to this hospital.
08:14Excellent.
08:15We have a point of agreement.
08:16You're not going to fire me.
08:17Your reputation won't last if you don't do your job.
08:19The clinic is part of your job.
08:22I want you to do your job.
08:23As the philosopher Jagger once said,
08:25you can't always get what you want.
08:35You're not my doctor.
08:36Are you Dr. House?
08:38Thankfully, no.
08:39I'm Dr. Chase.
08:40Dr. House is the head of diagnostic medicine.
08:42He's very busy,
08:43but he has taken a keen interest in your case.
08:50We inject gadolinium into a vein.
08:52It distributes itself throughout your brain
08:54and acts as a contrast material
08:56for the magnetic resonance imagery.
08:59Basically, whatever's in your head
09:00lights up like a Christmas tree.
09:01It might make you feel a little lightheaded.
09:03Dr. Cameron,
09:04I'm sorry.
09:05I have to stop you.
09:06There's a problem.
09:09You pulled my authorization.
09:11Yes.
09:12Why are you yelling?
09:13No MRIs, no imaging studies, no labs.
09:16You also can't make long-distance phone calls.
09:18You're gonna fire me.
09:18Have the guts to face me.
09:20Or photocopies.
09:21You're still yelling.
09:22I'm angry!
09:23You're risking a patient's life.
09:25I assume those are two separate points.
09:26You showed me disrespect.
09:28You embarrassed me.
09:29And as long as I work here,
09:29you have no legal...
09:30Is yelling designed to scare me?
09:32Because I'm not sure what it is
09:33I'm supposed to be scared of.
09:35More yelling?
09:37That's not scary.
09:38That you're gonna hurt me, that's scary.
09:40But I'm pretty sure I can outrun you.
09:44Oh, I looked into that philosopher you quoted.
09:46Jagger.
09:47And you're right.
09:48You can't always get what you want.
09:50But as it turns out,
09:51if you try sometimes,
09:52you get what you need.
09:55So, because you want me to treat patients,
09:58you're not letting me treat patients.
10:01I need you to do your job.
10:11Do the MRI.
10:13She folded.
10:18I've got to do four hours a week in this clinic
10:20until I make out the time I've missed.
10:242054.
10:25I'll be caught up in 2054.
10:28You better love this cousin a whole lot.
11:05All right, Rebecca.
11:06I know you may feel a little claustrophobic in there, but we need you to remain still.
11:12Okay, we're going to begin.
11:24I don't feel so good.
11:26It's all right.
11:27Just try to relax.
11:36Rebecca?
11:39Rebecca?
11:45Rebecca?
11:50Rebecca?
11:53Get her out of there.
11:55She probably fell asleep.
11:56She's exhausted.
11:57She was claustrophobic 30 seconds ago.
11:58She's not sleeping.
11:59We've got to get her out of there.
12:00Just be another move.
12:00She's having an allergic reaction to the gadolin.
12:02She'll be dead in two minutes.
12:07Hold her neck.
12:09Oh, she's ashen.
12:12She's not breathing.
12:13Every point five.
12:14Come on.
12:16I can't ventilate.
12:21Too much edema.
12:22Where's the surgical airway cap?
12:23Yep, coming.
12:29Coming.
12:29I can.
12:33Of course.
12:35What?
13:00Good call.
13:19We'll get that tube out of your throat later today.
13:22Just get some rest for now, okay?
13:28Told you.
13:29I can't trust you.
13:31I knew she was allergic to get her any
13:32and figured it was an easy way to get someone
13:34to cut a hole in her throat.
13:35Can I get a picture?
13:36I have to get a thousand words.
13:38You actually want me to talk to the patient?
13:40Get a history?
13:42We need to know if there's some genetic or environmental cause
13:44that's triggering an inflammatory response.
13:47I thought everybody lied.
13:49Truth begins in lies.
13:51Think about it.
13:54That doesn't mean anything, does it?
14:0112.52 p.m., Dr. House checks in.
14:03Please write that down.
14:04Do you have a cable TV here somewhere?
14:06General Hospital starts in eight minutes.
14:08No TV, but we've got patients.
14:10Can't you give out the aspirin yourself?
14:11I'll do the thing for work.
14:12I made sure your first case was an interesting one.
14:14Cough just won't go away.
14:15Runny nose looks a funny color.
14:17Patient admitted complaining of back spasms.
14:19I think I read about something like that in the New England Journal of Medicine.
14:21The patient is orange.
14:23The color?
14:23No, the fruit.
14:25You mean yellow.
14:26It's jaundice.
14:26I mean orange.
14:27Well, how orange?
14:28It's probably...
14:28Exam room one.
14:29Dr. McColl, you're needing a pediatrics.
14:33I was playing golf and my cleats got stuck.
14:36I mean, it hurt a little, but I kept playing.
14:38The next morning, I could barely stand up.
14:40Well, you're smiling, so I take it that means this isn't serious.
14:45What's that?
14:47What are you doing?
14:48Painkillers.
14:49Oh, for you, for your leg?
14:51No, because they're yummy.
14:53You want one?
14:53Make your back feel better.
14:58Unfortunately, you have a deeper problem.
15:00Your wife is having an affair.
15:03What?
15:03You're orange, you moron.
15:06It's one thing for you not to notice, but if your wife hasn't picked up on the fact that her
15:09husband has changed colors, she's just not paying attention.
15:11By the way, you consume just a ridiculous amount of carrots and megadose vitamins.
15:15Carrots turn you yellow, the niacin turns you red.
15:18Find some finger paint and do the math.
15:19You can get a good lawyer.
15:26Deep breath.
15:27It's cold.
15:30Has he been using his inhaler?
15:32Not in the past few days.
15:34He's, um, only 10.
15:36I worry about children taking such strong medicines so frequently.
15:39What happened to your leg?
15:41Your doctor probably was concerned about the strength of the medicine, too.
15:44She probably weighed that danger against the danger of not breathing.
15:48Oxygen is so important during those prepubescent years, don't you think?
15:52Okay, I'm going to assume that nobody's ever told you what asthma is.
15:55Or if they have, you had other things on your mind.
15:57A stimulant triggers cells in your child's airways to release substances that inflame the air passages and cause them to
16:04contract.
16:05Mucous production increases, cell lining starts to shed.
16:08But the steroids...
16:11The steroids...
16:13Stop the inflammation.
16:15More often this happens.
16:18What?
16:19More often this happens what?
16:21Forget it.
16:21If you don't trust steroids, you shouldn't trust doctors.
16:25My mother passed away four years ago.
16:28She had a heart attack.
16:29And my father broke his back doing construction.
16:35It's the house.
16:36It's her hand.
16:37I'm sorry.
16:42You couldn't have knocked?
16:45Steroids.
16:46Give her steroids.
16:47High doses of prednisone.
16:57You're looking for support for a diagnosis of cerebral acetylitis?
17:00Inflammation of blood vessels in the brain is awfully rare,
17:02especially for someone her age.
17:03So is a tumor.
17:04Her sed rate is elevated.
17:05Mildly.
17:06That could mean anything or nothing.
17:08Yeah, I know.
17:09I have no reason to think that it's vasculitis,
17:11except that it could be.
17:13If the blood vessels are inflamed,
17:14that's going to look exactly like what we saw in the MRI from Trenton County.
17:17The pressure's going to cause neurological symptoms.
17:19We can't diagnose that without a biopsy.
17:21Yes, we can.
17:22We treat it.
17:23If she gets better, we know we're right.
17:24And if we're wrong?
17:26Then we learn something else.
17:32Why, steroids?
17:34Just part of your treatment.
17:36You haven't had many visitors.
17:38No boyfriend?
17:39Three dates.
17:40I wouldn't have stood by him if he were vomiting all day.
17:43Well, what about work?
17:44You must have friends from work.
17:46Pretty much everybody I like is five years old.
17:51The nurse said you're stopping my radiation.
17:54We're just trying some alternative medication.
17:57So where's your family from then?
17:58Steroids aren't an alternative to radiation.
18:01The tests weren't really conclusive.
18:03We're treating you for vasculitis.
18:05It's the inflammation of blood vessels in the brain.
18:09But it's not a tumor.
18:11I don't have a tumor.
18:16Hey, you should have told her the truth.
18:19It's a long shot guess.
18:21If House is right, no harm.
18:22You might be wrong to have given a dying woman a couple days home.
18:24False, baby.
18:25If there was any other type available, I would have given her that.
18:37Why are you smelling Billy's pets?
18:40I'm not.
18:41Looked like you were.
18:42I was smelling the floor.
18:44Oh.
18:46Do you have any pets in this class?
18:47No, but we used to have a jerk, but Carly L dropped a buck on it.
18:52Careless.
18:53Do you need to smell?
18:55No, I'm smelling for mold.
18:57I don't need to smell that.
18:59You could smell a parrot.
19:01You said you didn't have any pets in this class.
19:04A parrot is a bird.
19:05Listen, Jackson, not the father.
19:07Parrots are the primary source of psittacosis.
19:10It's not the parrot.
19:11Psittacosis can lead to nerve problems and neurological complications.
19:15How many kids were in the class?
19:17Twenty.
19:18How many are homesick?
19:20None, but none.
19:21But you figured that five-year-olds are more serious about bird hygiene than their teacher.
19:26You been to her home?
19:27She lives in Trenton.
19:28I can go up to her room tomorrow morning and ask her for the key.
19:32Would the police call for permission before dropping by to check out a crime scene?
19:36It's not a crime scene.
19:37As far as I know, she's running a meth lab out of her basement.
19:39She's a kindergarten teacher.
19:41And if I were a kindergarten student, I would trust her implicitly.
19:46Okay.
19:48I'll give you a for instance.
19:49A lady back there who made your egg salad sandwich.
19:54Her eyes look glassy.
19:55Did she notice that?
19:57Now, hospital policy is to stay home if you're sick.
19:59But if you're making $8 an hour, then you kind of need the $8 an hour, right?
20:04And the sign in the bathroom says that employees must wash after using the facilities.
20:08But I figure that somebody who wipes snot on a sleeve isn't hyper-concerned about sanitary conditions.
20:14So what do you think?
20:15Should I trust her?
20:17I want you to check the patient's home for contaminants, garbage, medication.
20:20I can't just break into someone's house.
20:22Isn't that how you got into the Felker's home?
20:30Yeah.
20:30I know.
20:32Court records are sealed.
20:33You were 16.
20:34It was a stupid mistake.
20:36But your old gym teacher has a big mouth.
20:39You should write a thank you note.
20:40I should thank him.
20:42Well, I needed somebody around here with street smarts.
20:49Okay?
20:50Who knows when they're being conned, knows how to con.
20:53I should sue you.
20:55I'm pretty sure you can't sue somebody for wrongful hiring.
20:58But I'm pretty sure I can sue if you fire me for not breaking into some lady's house.
21:15Doing research.
21:16People are fascinating, aren't they?
21:18Why are you giving Adler steroids?
21:21Because she's my patient.
21:22That's what you do with patients.
21:24You give them medicine.
21:24You don't prescribe medicine based on guesses.
21:26At least we don't since Tuskegee and Mengele.
21:29You're comparing me to a Nazi?
21:31Nice.
21:32I'm stopping the treatment.
21:39She's my patient.
21:40It's my hospital.
21:42I did not get her sick.
21:44She's not an experiment.
21:45I have a legitimate theory about what's wrong with her.
21:47With no proof.
21:49There's never any proof.
21:50Five different doctors come up with five different diagnoses based on the same evidence.
21:54You don't have any evidence.
21:58And nobody knows anything, huh?
21:59Then how is it you always think you're right?
22:01I don't.
22:01I just find it hard to operate on the opposite assumption.
22:04Why are you so afraid of making a mistake?
22:07Because I'm a doctor.
22:08Because when we make mistakes, people die.
22:11Come on.
22:16People used to have more respect for cripples, you know.
22:21They didn't really.
22:26So how are you feeling?
22:28Much better, thanks.
22:30Are you Dr. Halish?
22:31I thought he was a he, but...
22:33No.
22:35Don't eat too much too fast.
22:38Thank him for me.
22:53Should I discontinue the treatment, boss?
22:56You got lucky.
23:02Cool, huh?
23:06Okay, once again.
23:09Okay.
23:10Good.
23:12Am I ever going to meet Dr. Halst?
23:16Well, you might run into him at the movies or on a bus.
23:20Is he a good man?
23:22He's a good doctor.
23:26Can he be one without the other?
23:28Don't you have to care about people?
23:30Caring is a good motivator.
23:33He's found something else.
23:37You feel us both sides?
23:39Mm-hmm.
23:39Okay, squeeze.
23:41Harder.
23:42All right.
23:44He's your friend, huh?
23:47Yeah.
23:49Does he care about you?
23:51I think so.
23:52You don't know?
23:54As Dr. House likes to say, everybody lies.
23:57It's not what people say.
24:00It's what they do.
24:04Yeah.
24:06He cares about me.
24:11I can't see.
24:15I can't see.
24:27Hello, Vanera!
24:42Well, your chest will be sore for a while.
24:45We need it to shock you to get your heart going.
24:50Okay.
24:52Can you arrange these to tell a story?
25:09She couldn't put them in order.
25:11Could the damage have been caused by a lack of oxygen during incision?
25:15No.
25:15I gave her the same test five minutes later.
25:17She did just fine.
25:19The altered mental status is intermittent, just like the verbal skills.
25:23So what now?
25:24Given the latest symptoms, it's clearly growing deeper into the brainstem.
25:27Soon she won't be able to walk.
25:29She'll go blind permanently, and then the respiratory center will fail.
25:33How long do we have?
25:35If it's a tumor, we're talking a month or two.
25:36If it's infectious, a few weeks.
25:38If it's vascular, that'll probably be fast as a fall.
25:41Maybe a week.
25:43We're gonna stop all the treatment.
25:46I still think it's a tumor.
25:48I think we should go back to the radiation.
25:50She didn't respond to the radiation.
25:52Maybe we didn't see the effect until after we started steroids.
25:54No, it's not a tumor.
25:56Steroids did something.
25:58I just don't know what.
25:59So we're just gonna do nothing?
26:01We're just gonna watch her die?
26:02Yeah.
26:03We're gonna watch her die.
26:05Specifically, we're gonna watch how fast she's dying.
26:07You just told us.
26:08Each diagnosis has its own time frame.
26:10When we see how fast it's killing her, we'll know what it is.
26:14And by then, maybe there's nothing we can do about it.
26:16There's gotta be something we can do.
26:19Something better than watching her die.
26:22Well, I got nothing.
26:24How about you?
26:30Bastard.
26:31Oh, Cameron, I need you for a couple of hours.
26:34What's up?
26:34When you break into someone's house, it's always better to have a white chick with you.
26:38Hadler's house?
26:38Why don't we just ask her for her keys?
26:40For all we know, she'd be running a meth lab out of her basement.
26:43I'm tired a lot.
26:46Any other reason why you think you might have chronic fatigue syndrome?
26:50It's kind of the definition, isn't it?
26:52It's kind of the definition of getting older.
26:53I had a couple headaches last month.
26:55Mild fever.
26:57Sometimes I can't sleep, and I have trouble concentrating.
27:00Apparently not while researching stuff on the Internet.
27:03I was thinking it also might be fibromyalgia.
27:09Excellent diagnosis.
27:10Is there anything for that?
27:16Do you know who I think that person might be?
27:19I need 36-bicotene and change for a dollar.
27:21Let me help you.
27:45Exam room two.
27:49House doesn't believe in pretense.
27:50He figures life's too short and too painful.
27:53So he just says what he thinks.
27:56Nothing interesting in the garbage.
27:58I say what I think is just another way of saying I'm an ass.
28:03Well, if you wanted to be judged for your medical prowess only, maybe you shouldn't have broken into someone's home.
28:09I was 16.
28:11I don't know about ticks, but the dogs definitely got fleas.
28:18I managed to make it to 17 without a criminal record.
28:24Yeah?
28:25Well, you obviously didn't grow up in my neighborhood.
28:29That's right.
28:30You stole all of her bread to feed your starving family, right?
28:33You always eat during break-ins?
28:35Am I supposed to respect their food more than I respect their DVD players?
28:39You want some?
28:40No.
28:41You gonna go hungry until she dies?
28:42No.
28:43You know what?
28:44After centuries of slavery, decades of civil rights marches, and more significantly, living like a monk, never getting less than
28:51a 4.0 GPA, you don't think it's kind of disgusting I get one of the top jobs in the
28:55country because I'm a delinquent?
28:58We'll eat, then we'll tear up the carpet.
29:03You went to Hopkins, right?
29:05Yep.
29:06So you went to a better school than I did.
29:08You got better grades than I did.
29:11So how'd you get the job?
29:13You stabbed a guy in a bar fight?
29:24Nothing.
29:25It's not a tumor.
29:26She's getting worse too fast.
29:28She can't stand up.
29:30No toxins?
29:31No medications?
29:31Nothing that would explain these symptoms.
29:33Family history of neurological problems?
29:35Not that I could tell from her underwear drawer.
29:38You said nothing that would explain these symptoms.
29:40What did you find that doesn't explain these symptoms?
29:44Dr. Wilson convinced you to treat this patient under false pretenses.
29:49Adler's not his cousin.
29:51That's ridiculous.
29:52You can ask yourself.
29:53Can we get back...
29:54She's not Jewish.
29:55Rachel Adler's not Jewish.
29:56I had him at our apartment.
29:59Dr. Foreman, a lot of Jews have non-Jewish relatives, and most of us don't keep kosher.
30:04I can see getting through high school without learning a thing about Jews, but medical school?
30:08Okay.
30:08Maybe she's Jewish, but she's definitely not your cousin.
30:11Really?
30:13This guy's...
30:13You don't even know her name.
30:15You called her Rachel.
30:16Her name is Rebecca.
30:18Yes.
30:19Yes.
30:19Her name is Rebecca.
30:22I call her Rachel.
30:23Rachel.
30:24You idiot!
30:26Listen.
30:27He said...
30:28Not you.
30:28Him.
30:29He said you didn't find anything.
30:31Everything I found was in my...
30:32You found ham.
30:34So?
30:35Where there's ham, there's pork.
30:38Where there's pork, there's neurosis de cercosis.
30:40Type one?
30:41You think she's got a worm in her brain?
30:43Fence.
30:43Could have been living there for years.
30:45Never occurred to me because...
30:46If people eat ham every day, it's quite a leap to think that she's got a tapeworm.
30:49Okay, Mr. Neurologist.
30:52What happens when you give steroids to a person who has a tapeworm?
30:55They...
30:55They get a little better and...
30:57And then they get worse.
31:01Just like Rebecca Adler did.
31:13In a typical case, you don't cook pork well enough, you digest live tapeworm larvae.
31:20They got these little hooks, they grab onto your bowel, they live, they grow up, they reproduce.
31:25Reproduce?
31:27There's only one lesion and it's nowhere near her bowel.
31:29That's because this is not a typical case.
31:32A tapeworm can produce 20,000 to 30,000 eggs a day.
31:36Guess where they go?
31:37Out.
31:38Not all of them.
31:40Unlike the larvae, the egg can pass right through the walls of the intestines, into the bloodstream.
31:45And where does the bloodstream go?
31:47Everywhere.
31:49As long as it's healthy, the immune system doesn't even know it's there.
31:52The worm builds a wall, uses secretions to shut down the body's immune response and control fluid flow.
31:58It's really very beautiful.
32:00As long as it's healthy.
32:02So what do we do?
32:03Call a vet?
32:04Nurse the little guy back to health?
32:05It's too late for that.
32:07It's dying.
32:08And as it dies, this parasite loses the ability to control the host's defenses.
32:13The immune system wakes up, attacks the worm, and everything starts to swell.
32:17And that is very bad for the brain.
32:20There could still be a hundred other things.
32:23The eosinophil count was normal.
32:25It's only abnormal in 30% of cases.
32:28Proving nothing.
32:29Oh, no, no, no.
32:30It...
32:31You see, it fits.
32:32It's perfect.
32:33It explains everything.
32:34But it proves nothing.
32:35I can prove it by treating.
32:36No, you can't.
32:40I was just with her.
32:41She doesn't want any more treatments.
32:42She doesn't want any more experiments.
32:44She wants to go home and die.
33:06Would you excuse us, please?
33:13I'm Dr. House.
33:16It's good to meet you.
33:21You're being an idiot.
33:28You have a tapeworm in your brain.
33:32It's not pleasant, but if we don't do anything, you'll be dead by the weekend.
33:35Have you actually seen the war?
33:38When you're all better, I'll show you my diplomas.
33:41You were sure I had vasculitis, too.
33:44Now I can't walk and I'm wearing a diaper.
33:47What's this treatment going to do for me?
33:49I'm not talking about a treatment.
33:50I'm talking about a cure.
33:52That because I might be wrong, you want to die.
33:57What made you a cripple?
34:03I had an infarction.
34:04A heart attack?
34:07It's what happens when the blood flow is obstructed.
34:09If it's in the heart, it's a heart attack.
34:11If it's in the lungs, it's a pulmonary embolism.
34:13If it's in the brain, it's a stroke.
34:15I had it in my thigh muscles.
34:17Wasn't there something they could do?
34:18There's plenty they could do.
34:20They made the right diagnosis.
34:22But the only symptom was pain.
34:26Not many people get to experience muscle death.
34:29Did you think you were dying?
34:31I hoped I was dying.
34:35So you hide in your office, refuse to see patients,
34:37because you don't like the way people look at you.
34:41You feel cheated by life, so now you're going to get even with the world.
34:45But you want me to fight this.
34:48Why?
34:50What makes you think I'm so much better than you?
34:54When you're scared, you'll turn into me.
34:56I just want to die with little dignity.
34:59There's no such thing.
35:01Our bodies break down.
35:03Sometimes when we're 90, sometimes before we're even born.
35:05But it always happens, and there's never any dignity in it.
35:08I don't care if you can walk, see, wipe your own ass.
35:11It's always ugly.
35:12Always.
35:17We're going to live with dignity. We can't die with it.
35:38No treatment.
35:41Maybe we can get a court order, override her wishes, claim she doesn't have the capacity to make this decision.
35:46But she does.
35:48But we could claim that the illness made her mentally incompetent, right?
35:52A pretty common result.
35:53That didn't happen here.
35:54He's not going to do it.
35:56She's not just a file to him anymore.
35:58He respects her.
36:00So because you respect her, you're going to let her die.
36:04I solved the case.
36:06My work is done.
36:10Patients always want proof.
36:12We're not making cars here.
36:14We don't give guarantees.
36:18I think we can prove it's a worm.
36:21It's non-invasive.
36:22It's safe.
36:24I'm not completely sure, but I thought I'd...
36:26Yeah, yeah, yeah. What's the damn idea?
36:28Have you ever seen a worm under an x-ray?
36:29A regular old, no contrast, hundred-year-old technology x-ray.
36:33They light up like shotgun pellets.
36:35Just like on a contrast MRI.
36:37Which is the same thing as a CT scan, which we did, which proved nothing.
36:40Worm's cyst is the same density as the cerebrospinal fluid.
36:43We're not going to see anything in her head.
36:46But Chase is right.
36:47He's right.
36:48We should x-ray her, but we don't x-ray her brain.
36:50We x-ray her leg.
36:52Worms love thigh muscle.
36:54She's got one in her head.
36:55I guarantee you there's one in her leg.
37:10Hold still, Rebecca.
37:13Hold still, Rebecca.
37:13Hold still, Rebecca.
37:20This here...
37:23...is a worm larva.
37:25So if it's in my leg, it's in my brain?
37:28Are you looking for a guarantee?
37:30It's there.
37:31Probably been there six to ten years.
37:33Do I have more?
37:35Probably.
37:38It's good news.
37:40What do we do now?
37:41Now we get you better.
37:46Albenzole.
37:50Two pills?
37:51Yeah.
37:52Every day.
37:52For at least a month.
37:53With a meal.
37:54Two pills?
37:55Yeah.
37:56Possible side effects include abdominal pain, nausea, headaches, dizziness, fever and hair loss.
38:03We'll probably make you keep taking the pills, even if you get every one of those.
38:13Dr. Bullitt.
38:14Dr. Bullitt.
38:14Dr. Bullitt.
38:16Dr. Bullitt.
38:16Dr. Bullitt.
38:17Dr. Bullitt.
38:25Why did you hire me?
38:28Does it matter?
38:29Kind of hard to work for a guy who doesn't respect you.
38:32Why?
38:32Is that rhetorical?
38:33No.
38:34It just seems that way because you can't think of an answer.
38:37Does it make a difference, what I think?
38:40I'm a jerk.
38:41The only thing that matters is what you think.
38:44Can you do the job?
38:45You hired a black guy because he had a juvenile record.
38:47No.
38:48It wasn't a racial thing.
38:50I didn't see a black guy.
38:52I just saw a doctor with a juvenile record.
38:57I hired Chase because his dad made a phone call.
39:00And I hired you because you are extremely pretty.
39:05You hired me to get into my pants?
39:06I can't believe that that would shock you.
39:09It's also not what I said.
39:11No, I hired you because you look good.
39:14It's like having a nice piece of art in the lobby.
39:16I was in the top of my class.
39:17But not the top.
39:18I did an internship at the Mayo Clinic.
39:20You were a very good applicant.
39:22But not the best.
39:23Wouldn't that upset you?
39:24Really?
39:25To think that you were hired because of some genetic gift of beauty
39:27instead of some genetic gift of intelligence?
39:29I worked very hard to get where I am.
39:31But you didn't have to.
39:34People choose the paths that gain them the greatest rewards for the least amount of effort.
39:38That's a law of nature.
39:39And you defied it.
39:40That's why I hired you.
39:42You could have married rich.
39:43You could have been a model.
39:44You could have just shown up and people would have given you stuff.
39:47Lots of stuff.
39:48But you didn't.
39:49You worked your stunning little ass off.
39:52Am I supposed to be flattered?
39:53Gorgeous women do not go to medical school.
39:56Unless they're as damaged as they are beautiful.
40:00Were you abused by a family member?
40:02No.
40:03Sexually assaulted?
40:04No.
40:05But you are damaged, aren't you?
40:14I had to go.
40:20I followed him.
40:23I couldn't stop thinking about what that doctor said.
40:25I told you not to listen to him.
40:27He's an idiot.
40:27I was orange.
40:29I don't want to know what you found out.
40:32You don't care?
40:33I'm your doctor.
40:35You've been good to me and good to this hospital.
40:37Of course I care.
40:38But I don't see how this conversation can end well for me.
40:41Either your wife is having an affair or she's not having an affair
40:45and you have come here because you rightly think I should fire him.
40:48But I can't.
40:49Even if it cost me your money.
40:52The son of a bitch is the best doctor we have.
41:02Feeling any better?
41:03I can't complain.
41:05As you know, the hospital has certain rules.
41:07And as you also know, we tend to ignore them.
41:10But I think this one's going to be a little obvious unless we get you help.
41:14If anyone asks us, you have eleven daughters and five sons.
41:19Look at this hair!
41:21It's so good to see you guys. I miss you.
41:25Is this for me?
41:28It's beautiful.
41:32I love you guys.
41:35I wanted to thank Dr. House, but he never visited again.
41:37He cured you.
41:39You didn't cure him.
41:42Okay.
41:42I want a hug and a kiss from every single one of you!
41:45Get up here right now!
41:48There.
41:50Hold on.
41:52She's converted.
41:56I would have said she was your cousin.
41:59Why would you lie?
42:01He got you to take the case.
42:04He lied to a friend to save a stranger.
42:07I don't think that's kind of screwed up.
42:09You've never lied to me?
42:11I never lie.
42:13All right.
42:14And what is that doctor?
42:16Why do we do this?
42:17Because we're doctors.
42:19If we make mistakes, people die.
42:24Thank you, doctor.
42:26Dr. House, you have a patient.
42:34He says he needs a refill.
42:38That change for a dollar?
42:41Now you can't always get what you want.
42:46You can't always get what you want.
42:51I am not.
42:51I am not an angel, I am not a pillager.
42:52None of us can always change the line.
42:52How can I do it?
42:52Again, you're not a fracture regarding theор 2007 Nokiaciğim.
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