Sports Medicine (House)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

House episode
"Sports Medicine"
Episode no. HOU-112
Airdate February 22, 2005
Writer(s) John Mankiewicz,
David Shore
Director(s) Keith Gordon

House Season 1
November 2004 - May 2005

  1. Pilot
  2. Paternity
  3. Occam's Razor
  4. Maternity
  5. Damned If You Do
  6. The Socratic Method
  7. Fidelity
  8. Poison
  9. DNR
  10. Histories
  11. Detox
  12. Sports Medicine
  13. Cursed
  14. Control
  15. Mob Rules
  16. Heavy
  17. Role Model
  18. Babies & Bathwater
  19. Kids
  20. Love Hurts
  21. Three Stories
  22. Honeymoon
All House episodes

Sports Medicine is the twelfth episode of the first season of House, which premiered on the FOX network on February 22, 2005. When baseball star Hank Wiggen suddenly breaks his arm (a mid-pitch break similar to the one suffered by San Francisco Giants pitcher Dave Dravecky in 1989), he finds out he has a bizarre case of bone loss. House rejects all of Wiggin's denials of drugs and runs him through a battery of tests nonetheless. Movie director Bryan Singer, who is the executive producer of the series, appears in this episode as the person directing Hank in the anti-drug ad during the first scene.

[edit] Plot

A baseball player named Hank Wiggen shoots an anti-drug commercial but it’s not going well. The director tries to provide some help, but Hank doesn’t grasp what to do until his wife, Lola, advises him to just tell his own story. Hank got mixed up in drugs and only quit because he was going to die. Now he’s clean and getting ready to pitch on Opening Day. On the next take, Hank throws a pitch and his upper arm breaks. His comeback is over.

At the hospital, Wilson tells House that he thinks Hank has osteopenia but that his bones are too thin to be fixed. Since Hank is young, House feels that cancer is the cause and Wilson hasn’t found the cancer yet. The rest of the staff agrees that it must be cancer. Looking at Hank’s baseball card, House notices that Hank put on 25 pounds after spending the previous season in a Japanese league. The doctors suspect steroids, which would explain the kidney problems and bone loss.

Chase wants a urine sample but Hank isn’t willing. Chase just takes some from Hank’s catheter bag. Cameron and Foreman report to House that tests showed there are no steroids, but that that Hank has elevated levels of Beta 2 proteins. He could have either amyloidosis or lymphoma. House still believes that steroids have come into play. Foreman admits that the FAT PAD biopsy and abdominal CT scan were negative for cancers, but Cameron points out that Hank also tested negative for steroids. House knows that today’s steroids can be hidden from tests, but one thing can’t be hidden. House goes into Hank’s room and pulls back the bed sheet. Hank suffers from hypogonadism (shrunken testicles), which is a side effect of steroid use. House has them start Hank on Lupron. Hank’s wife Lola is outraged.

If Hank isn’t on steroids, Lupron will cause severe respiratory problems. Sure enough, Hank begins to gasp for air. House and staff try to figure out what’s killing Hank. He isn’t producing enough testosterone which is causing the hypogonadism. Chase suggests that it could be Addison’s disease, which is treated with steroids. But Foreman mentions that Addison’s would cause him to retain fluid, and that would overwork Hank’s strained kidneys. What exactly is creating the kidney problems? House suggests past steroid use.

House drops in on Hank and Lola to explain the situation. He can keep denying steroid use, but that may be the trigger to all his health problems and it is treatable. If there is no steroid use, then the doctors are at a loss on what is causing the liver to malfunction. He could die. Lola is adamant that her husband is telling the truth, but Hank finally opens up. He admits that five years ago, a pitching coach gave him something that made him gain twelve pounds of muscle in a month. Hank has no idea what it was.

House presses Cuddy to put Hank on the transplant list, but she won’t budge. She wants evidence of Addison’s disease or anything else life-threatening. Lola tells House she wants to donate one of her own kidneys, and he is skeptical that she’ll be a donor match. After some time, House gets back the lab results. Although Lola is a match, she’s pregnant and cannot donate in her current condition. The next day, Foreman tells Hank that he’s healthy enough for the transplant. Hank forbids his wife to get an abortion in order to undergo the surgery. House thinks he’s being ridiculous, but Cameron isn’t so sure. They haven’t even narrowed the diagnosis to Addison’s disease yet.

Hank’s heart starts racing. His T-waves have peaked and his potassium is up. Chase and Foreman give him insulin sub cutaneously, D-50 glucose and kayexolate to treat hyperkalemia and get the potassium out. They think this will rule out both Addison’s and steroids. House and Cameron arrive to find Hank’s heart rate dropping precipitously. They have no idea what’s afflicting Hank and they can’t stabilize his heart rate.

That night, House observes Hank and notices he is hallucinating. Wilson wonders whether it is digitalis, which would explain the heart rate fluctuation and this new symptom, but not the earlier ones. Hank is not even on digitalis. House pays a visit to Warner, the scout that discovered Hank and was on the set of the commercial. Warner tells House that he has a heart condition and treats it with digitalis. When he takes out the bottle to show it to House, he notices that it is almost empty, which is odd, as he just reffiled his prescription a couple of days ago. House thinks Hank stole the pills and tried to kill himself with the drug.

Back at the hospital, House lays it out for Hank. He knows what he did and he’s scheduling the transplant. Hank wants Lola to have the baby. Making his point, he spills some of his urine bag on House’s pants. House will begin treating for Addison’s disease, which will ruin the patient’s kidneys. House runs into Lola in the hallway and tells her about Hank. When he says she should keep her baby, Lola hugs him. House wonders why she didn’t smell the urine that Hank splashed on him.

House tracks down his group. They eliminated environmental causes because they thought Lola was healthy. She hasn’t been able to smell anything for six months. The group should now consider this couple as a single patient. Their symptoms point to cadmium poisoning. Chase visits Hank to get another urine sample and asks what they should be looking for this time. Hank admits he’s still using marijuana from the dealer he and Lola shared in Japan. She quit but he didn’t. Chase points out that if there’s cadmium in the soil, the marijuana can cause all of these symptoms. Chase puts Hank on treatment for cadmium poisoning. However, House writes on the medical report that it is Addison's disease so that Hank can avoid a drug ban from Major League Baseball.

During the episode, House manages to secure two $1,000 tickets to a monster truck show and wants Wilson to come with him. However, Wilson says that he has to speak at an oncology dinner the night of the show and can't make it, so House asks Cameron (who has no idea what a monster truck is). During his conversation with Cameron, she reveals that Wilson had cancelled his speech weeks ago. When he brings this up to Wilson, he admits he cancelled to have dinner with Stacy Warner, House's ex-girlfriend. (In the episode, he just refers to her as "Stacy the Constitutional lawyer," and a specific link between her and House, though hinted, isn't made clear until the later episode "Three Stories.") Wilson offers to cancel the dinner, but House asks him to go through with it. At the end of the episode, House and Cameron are seen at the monster truck show enjoying themselves.

[edit] Actors

[edit] External links