The following is an episode list for the medical drama House. The series began on FOX on November 16, 2004 in the United States and was quickly picked up for a full season of 22 episodes. House gained high ratings and critical praise in the United States when it was placed in the time slot following American Idol during the spring of its first season, now, it airs in 28 countries.
As of the fourth season, which premiered on September 25, 2007, there are a total of 79 episodes of House aired.
The first, second and third seasons are available on DVD.
Seasons
Season | Episodes | Originally aired |
Region 1 DVD release date |
Region 2 DVD release date |
Region 4 DVD release date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 22 | 2004 – 2005 | August 30, 2005 | February 27, 2006 | November 28, 2005 | |
2 | 24 | 2005 – 2006 | August 22, 2006 | October 23, 2006 | October 23, 2006 | |
3 | 24 | 2006 – 2007 | August 21, 2007 | November 19, 2007 | September 19, 2007 | |
4 | 12 | 2007 – 2008 | TBA | TBA | TBA |
Season 1: 2004-2005
Episode # | Title | Writer(s) | Director | Original airdate[1] | Final Diagnosis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 (1-01) | "Pilot" | David Shore | Bryan Singer | November 16, 2004 | Neurocysticercosis |
2 (1-02) | "Paternity" | Lawrence Kaplow | Peter O'Fallon | November 23, 2004 | Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis |
A 16-year old high school student, Dan, starts suffering from nightmares and frequent hallucinations, and he reveals he was hit in the head while playing lacrosse at school. Dan is apparently suffering from MS, and risky brain surgery is needed. Meanwhile House must deal with a patient looking to set up a lawsuit and a mother who doesn't believe in vaccinations. | |||||
3 (1-03) | "Occam's Razor" | David Shore | Bryan Singer | November 30, 2004 | Colchicine poisoning |
Dr. House and his team struggle to find out why a college student collapsed after having sex with his girlfriend. | |||||
4 (1-04) | "Maternity" | Peter Blake | Newton Thomas Sigel | December 7, 2004 | Echovirus 11 |
House's prediction that two sick babies is the beginning of something worse is dreadfully correct and he and his team quarantine the hospital's maternity ward to try and find out the source of the illness. | |||||
5 (1-05) | "Damned If You Do" | Sara B. Cooper | Greg Yaitanes | December 14, 2004 | Copper allergy |
6 (1-06) | "The Socratic Method" | John Mankiewicz | Peter Medak | December 21, 2004 | Vitamin K deficiency, hepatocellular carcinoma, and Wilson's disease |
When a schizophrenic mother has a deep-vein thrombosis, a strange phone call causes House to question her (in)sanity once again. | |||||
7 (1-07) | "Fidelity" | Thomas L. Moran | Bryan Spicer | December 28, 2004 | African trypanosomiasis |
Two men are out jogging -- one of them returns back to his wife and discovers her dead asleep and brings her to the clinic. The doctors are puzzled by her symptoms. They consider everything from tumors to breast cancer to rabbit fever. When all the treatments fail, House concludes she has African sleeping sickness. However, neither the woman nor her husband could possibly have ever been to Africa. The woman will die without the proper treatment, but neither one will admit to having an affair. | |||||
8 (1-08) | "Poison" | Matt Witten | Guy Ferland | January 25, 2005 | Phosmet poisoning |
House and his team investigate the mysterious poisoning of high-school student Matt Davis but another teen is brought in with all of the same symptoms but almost nothing else in common with Matt. | |||||
9 (1-09) | "DNR" | David Foster | Frederick King Keller | February 1, 2005 | Arteriovenous malformation |
When a legendary jazz musician collapses mid-session, House and his team run into technical difficulties treating the man, who has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis but when he orders to have a DNR, House disobeys it and ends up in court. | |||||
10 (1-10) | "Histories" | Joel Thompson | Dan Attias | February 8, 2005 | Tuberculosis and rabies |
Dr. Foreman believes an uncooperative homeless woman is faking seizures to get a meal ticket at the teaching hospital. But her homelessness strikes a personal chord with Dr. Wilson and he grows determined to keep her from falling between the cracks. Meanwhile, House has an audience of two medical students who are learning how to do case studies. | |||||
11 (1-11) | "Detox" | Lawrence Kaplow and Thomas L. Moran | Nelson McCormick | February 15, 2005 | Naphthalene poisoning |
While trying to figure out why a young patient won't stop bleeding after a car wreck, House takes Cuddy's challenge and goes off Vicodin for a week in exchange for no clinic duty for a month. If House and his team can't determine the source of his patient's blood loss, the 16-year-old car victim will die in a matter of days. As House's withdrawal symptoms become more and more severe, his patient directives for his patient are more harsh and risky than usual, and Foreman and Cameron are afraid he may not be thinking clearly enough to save the patient's life. | |||||
12 (1-12) | "Sports Medicine" | John Mankiewicz and David Shore | Keith Gordon | February 22, 2005 | Cadmium poisoning |
A severely broken arm reveals a bizarre case of bone loss and ends the comeback plans of major league pitcher Hank Wiggen. House suspects Hank – with a history of drug abuse – is lying about using steroids, as his condition worsens. When Hank's kidneys start to fail, his wife offers to donate hers, but she would have to abort her early pregnancy. Meanwhile, Foreman dates a pharmaceutical representative and House is stuck with two tickets to a monster truck rally. | |||||
13 (1-13) | "Cursed" | Matt Witten and Peter Blake | Daniel Sackheim | March 1, 2005 | Anthrax and leprosy |
After consulting a Ouija board on his life, a young boy thinks that he is going to die. Chase's dad came to the hospital to meet Wilson and help House to diagnose the kid. | |||||
14 (1-14) | "Control" | Lawrence Kaplow | Randy Zisk | March 15, 2005 | Congestive heart failure onset by bulimia and regular use of ipecac |
Billionaire entrepreneur Edward Vogler spends $100 million on the clinic and becomes the new Chairman of the Board. As a businessman, Vogler intends to turn the clinic into a profitable venue for his biotech venture and plans to eliminate the financially draining services of Dr. House. Meanwhile, a businesswoman who has it all – perfect life, perfect body, perfect job – finds herself inexplicably paralyzed. When he diagnoses her secret, House must risk his job and his medical license to save her. | |||||
15 (1-15) | "Mob Rules" | David Foster and John Mankiewicz | Tim Hunter | March 22, 2005 | Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency |
House is placed under a court order to discern what's ailing a mobster (Joey) due for federal testimony and then the Witness Protection Program. The witness's brother and lawyer (Bill) appears to work against the team and the testimony when they discover his brother has hepatitis C. Cuddy continues to battle Vogler over House's importance to the hospital. | |||||
16 (1-16) | "Heavy" | Thomas L. Moran | Fred Gerber | March 29, 2005 | Cushing's disease secondary to pituitary adenoma |
House and his team investigate when an overweight ten year old girl has a heart attack. Adding to his stress, Vogler still demands that House get rid of one member of his team. His initial choice is rejected by Vogler and House believes that he's being sold out. | |||||
17 (1-17) | "Role Model" | Matt Witten | Peter O'Fallon | April 12, 2005 | Delayed-onset CVID secondary to phenytoin-mediated Epstein-Barr virus infection. |
A popular U.S. senator and presidential candidate succumbs to illness at a fundraiser and Vogler assigns House to his case. In addition, Vogler tells House he can keep his whole team if he endorses Vogler's pharmaceutical company. The Senator's initial diagnosis seems to point to AIDS, but House and team dig deeper for another answer. Meanwhile, House handles the case of a woman who apparently got pregnant without having sex. | |||||
18 (1-18) | "Babies & Bathwater" | Peter Blake and David Shore (teleplay) Peter Blake (story) | Bill Johnson | April 19, 2005 | LEMS secondary to Small cell lung carcinoma |
A pregnant woman arrives at the hospital with brain and kidney problems and House must contend with both her condition and Vogler's eagerness to see the doctor removed. The couple are told they will have to decide between the mother and child's lives after the team discovers small cell lung cancer. Vogler calls a board meeting in order to get rid of House. | |||||
19 (1-19) | "Kids" | Thomas L. Moran and Lawrence Kaplow | Deran Sarafian | May 3, 2005 | Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura secondary to pregnancy |
House fights off a meningitis scare and Cuddy gives his team an hour to produce results after he singles out a young patient who doesn't quite fit the criteria. House tries to get Cameron to return in the wake of Vogler's departure but she asks House to tell her why he really wants her back. | |||||
20 (1-20) | "Love Hurts" | Sara B. Cooper | Bryan Spicer | May 10, 2005 | Fulminating osteomyelitis |
The teaching hospital buzzes with rumors of House's upcoming date with Cameron. Everyone has words of wisdom for Dr. Gregory House and for Cameron. In confronting a patient, the man goes into a stroke and House must discern what is causing the condition. House deals with an elderly couple who partake in the little blue pill. | |||||
21 (1-21) | "Three Stories" | David Shore | Paris Barclay | May 17, 2005 | Streptococcal infection (farmer) Osteosarcoma (volleyball player) Thigh muscle infarction (House) |
House receives a visit from an ex-flame who has come seeking his help with her sick husband. House gives a lecture to medical students about diagnosing patients and presents three patients with leg pain, but for different reasons. | |||||
22 (1-22) | "Honeymoon" | Lawrence Kaplow and John Mankiewicz | Frederick King Keller | May 24, 2005 | Acute intermittent porphyria |
House diagnoses Mark, the husband of his former love Stacy. Although the tests don't indicate a condition and he claims to be fine outside of stomach pain, it appears that his brain is dying which leaves House puzzled. When he comes to a potential diagnosis, he has to fight against the patient's wishes to get the proper test done. |
Season 2: 2005-2006
Episode # | Title | Writer(s) | Director | Original airdate[3] | Final Diagnosis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
23 (2-01) | "Acceptance" | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner | Dan Attias | September 13, 2005 | Methanol poisoning and pheochromocytoma |
House is brought in for a consult on a Death Row inmate with mysterious symptoms. Cameron feels the hospitals resources would be better served elsewhere, with a young cancer patient. House and Stacy try to establish a good work relationship, especially after he lies to her to secure the transfer of the inmate to the hospital. | |||||
24 (2-02) | "Autopsy" | Lawrence Kaplow | Deran Sarafian | September 20, 2005 | Thrombosis |
A 9-year-old terminal cancer patient is brought before House after she experiences hallucinations. House figures out a way to help her, but it will involve serious risk. The young patient asks Chase if he will kiss her because she's never kissed a boy. They discover that she has a tumor on her heart, but when it's benign, they believe that a clot may be navigating her body. | |||||
25 (2-03) | "Humpty Dumpty" | Matt Witten | Dan Attias | September 27, 2005 | Psittacosis |
Cuddy feels responsible when her handyman falls off her roof and starts to show weird signs. House's team amputates one hand to prevent the spread of infection, but then the other starts to show signs and they have to seek out the source before it kills the patient. | |||||
26 (2-04) | "TB or Not TB" | David Foster | Peter O'Fallon | November 1, 2005 | Nesidioblastoma and tuberculosis |
A famous doctor gets ill when working in Africa, and is sent to House for treatment. Everyone except House believes that his illness is due to tuberculosis. | |||||
27 (2-05) | "Daddy's Boy" | Thomas L. Moran | Greg Yaitanes | November 8, 2005 | Spinal tumor and radiation poisoning |
A student who just graduated from Princeton experiences severe spasms at graduation party. Meanwhile, House's parents drop by. | |||||
28 (2-06) | "Spin" | Sara Hess | Fred Gerber | November 15, 2005 | Air embolism, pure red cell aplasia, thymoma, and myasthenia gravis |
A famous cyclist is brought to House's clinic after collapsing during a race. He is surprisingly honest about several illegal medications and techniques he applied to himself, but his sickness is not caused by any of these. | |||||
29 (2-07) | "Hunting" | Liz Friedman | Gloria Muzio | November 22, 2005 | Echinococcosis |
House is confronted by a gay man, Kalvin, with AIDS who demands treatment. The patient coughs blood onto Cameron who then must be checked for the virus herself. Kalvin's father begins to show signs of illness. House makes moves on Stacy using sensitive information he got about her relationship with Mark. | |||||
30 (2-08) | "The Mistake" | Peter Blake | David Semel | November 29, 2005 | Behcet's Disease, then Hepatitis C and hepatocellular carcinoma |
A lawsuit is brought against Chase and House for the death of a mother who came in with stomach pains. A disciplinary committee convenes to determine whether either of them is at fault in the death. | |||||
31 (2-09) | "Deception" | Michael R. Perry | Deran Sarafian | December 13, 2005 | Clostridium perfringens and Munchausen syndrome |
A woman who has a seizure is admitted to the hospital but Cameron wants her to be discharged when they discover she has Munchausen syndrome; however, House believes she has an underlying condition. | |||||
32 (2-10) | "Failure to Communicate" | Doris Egan | Jace Alexander | January 10, 2006 | Cerebral malaria |
A famed journalist collapses in his magazine company's office. While he acts nonchalantly after getting up, it soon becomes clear from his word salad inflected speech that he is suffering from aphasia. | |||||
33 (2-11) | "Need to Know" | Pamela Davis | David Semel | February 7, 2006 | Hepatocellular adenoma |
Cameron worries about the potential results of her HIV test. House basks in the afterglow of his kiss with Stacy, but Wilson tries to keep a level head about things. House must dig through the life and lies of a busy housewife to find the true reason why she's shown signs of degenerating physically and mentally. | |||||
34 (2-12) | "Distractions" | Lawrence Kaplow | Dan Attias | February 14, 2006 | Serotonin syndrome |
The team struggles to diagnose a teen suffering from spasms when his severe burns make most of their usual diagnostic tests impossible. Meanwhile, House attempts to get revenge on the doctor who turned him in for cheating in medical school. | |||||
35 (2-13) | "Skin Deep" | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner & David Shore (teleplay) Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (story) | Jim Hayman | February 20, 2006 | Male pseudohermaphroditism and testicular cancer |
House treats a teenage supermodel who gets into a catfight on the catwalk and then passes out. When her tox-screen shows heroin, she's treated for addiction. Unfortunately, her symptoms continue after she's weaned off the drugs. Meanwhile, House fights off increasingly bad leg pains. | |||||
36 (2-14) | "Sex Kills" | Matt Witten | David Semel | March 7, 2006 | Brucellosis |
House tries to treat a man who has a seizure but doesn't realize it and needs a new heart. When the transplant committee votes "no" for a new heart, House tries to get one from a dead woman whose organs were also rejected by the committee. | |||||
37 (2-15) | "Clueless" | Thomas L. Moran | Deran Sarafian | March 28, 2006 | Gold sodium thiomalate poisoning |
When a man can't breathe after roleplaying with his wife, House must question the motives for the marriage. | |||||
38 (2-16) | "Safe" | Peter Blake | Félix Enríquez Alcalá | April 4, 2006 | Tick paralysis |
Melinda, a troubled teenage girl who is immuno-compromised as a result of the medications she must take after a heart transplant, has a severe allergic reaction and goes into shock when her boyfriend visits her. Meanwhile, House and Wilson continue to work out the problems in their new living arrangement. | |||||
39 (2-17) | "All In" | David Foster | Fred Gerber | April 11, 2006 | Erdheim-Chester disease |
The hospital is hosting an oncology benefit, when a 6-year-old boy is brought in exhibiting symptoms that aren't too unusual, especially since a patient in House's past passed away from similar illness. House is convinced the boy's case is identical and that he can predict the course of the young patient's illness. | |||||
40 (2-18) | "Sleeping Dogs Lie" | Sara Hess | Greg Yaitanes | April 18, 2006 | Bubonic plague |
A young woman’s health becomes a question of ethics. Hannah has been unable to sleep for sometime now. It isn't until Dr. House discovers she will need a liver transplant that he also uncovers some vital information about her and her partner Max, which might lead to her death. Foreman is accused of plagiarism by Cameron when an article he authors appears remarkably similar to one of hers. | |||||
41 (2-19) | "House vs. God" | Doris Egan | John F. Showalter | April 25, 2006 | Tuberous sclerosis and herpes encephalitis |
House wants to call a 15-year old faith-healer's bluff, but when the boy is admitted into the hospital, he touches a cancer patient and causes the cancer to go into remission; House must question his own faith. After being diagnosed, the boy refuses brain surgery, but when his condition worsens, House and his staff have to make a decision. Meanwhile, Cameron is still sour about Foreman stealing her idea, or so she says. | |||||
42 (2-20) | "Euphoria, Part 1" | Matthew V. Lewis | Deran Sarafian | May 2, 2006 | No diagnosis |
House is trying to cure a crooked cop who acts turbulent and laughs uncontrollably, but he and his team are unable to determine the cause. When Foreman starts showing similar symptoms, the situation gets far worse than anybody expected. | |||||
43 (2-21) | "Euphoria, Part 2" | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner & David Shore | Deran Sarafian | May 3, 2006 | Legionellosis (induced) and primary amoebic meningoencephalitis due to infection by Naegleria fowleri |
The police officer that had the same symptoms as Foreman has died. Fearful of his own death, Foreman contacts his father who rushes to be by his son’s side. Meanwhile, House and the gang are still trying to do everything they can to help Foreman. | |||||
44 (2-22) | "Forever" | Liz Friedman | Daniel Sackheim | May 9, 2006 | Coeliac disease and MALT lymphoma |
On his way out the door, a man vomits and decides to stay home from work only to find his wife in the bathtub having a seizure, and their newborn infant drowning. | |||||
45 (2-23) | "Who's Your Daddy?" | John Mankiewicz & Lawrence Kaplow (teleplay) Charles M. Duncan & John Mankiewicz (story) | Martha Mitchell | May 16, 2006 | Haemochromatosis and zygomycosis |
A 16-year-old Hurricane Katrina victim suffering from hallucinations as a result of the tragedy is brought to House by his former bandmate who recently found out the girl is his daughter. Although House fears his friend is being scammed, he takes the case. As he works his way through the girl's lies so he can diagnose and treat her, he's forced to tell a few lies of his own. | |||||
46 (2-24) | "No Reason" | David Shore (teleplay) Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (story) | David Shore | May 23, 2006 | Hallucination (House) No patients diagnosed |
As House and his team are working on the diagnosis of a man with a giant, swollen tongue, the husband of a former patient walks into House's office and shoots him. House continues to treat his patient from his ICU hospital bed with the shooter, who has been shot by hospital security and hand-cuffed to his bed, as his roommate. When the after-effects of the shooting begin to impact House, he starts to question his own ability to diagnose properly. As his patient's body deteriorates, House struggles through his self-doubt and must trust his team to find a way to solve the case. |
Season 3: 2006-2007
Episode # | Title | Writer(s) | Director | Original airdate[4] | Final Diagnosis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
47 (3-01) | "Meaning" | Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (teleplay) Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner, Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (story) | Deran Sarafian | September 5, 2006 | Addison's disease (Richard) Scurvy (Caren) |
House has recovered from multiple gunshot wounds and is back at work, taking on two cases simultaneously: Richard, paralyzed after brain cancer surgery eight years ago, who drove himself on his motorized wheelchair headfirst into a swimming pool; and Caren, a young woman paralyzed from the neck down after a yoga session. As House begins to diagnose and treat them, the team notices a distinct change in his attitude toward the patients. | |||||
48 (3-02) | "Cane and Able" | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner (teleplay) Russel Friend, Garrett Lerner, Lawrence Kaplow & David Shore (story) | Daniel Sackheim | September 12, 2006 | Chimerism |
House's ego has taken a blow when he believes he failed to diagnose a patient. When this failure begins to affect him physically, a stubborn House takes on his next case. Seven-year-old Clancy, a product of in-vitro fertilization, has been admitted to the hospital with rectal bleeding and claims of being tortured by aliens. The team runs tests on him, but when they get different results from the same tests, in addition to finding an unknown metal object in his neck, they are forced to give Clancy’s alien claims a little more credence. Amidst all this weirdness, Cuddy and Wilson decide it would be best not to tell House the truth about his last case, thinking that perhaps he will learn some humility if he believes he’s not always right. Cameron discovers the lie and is outraged. A frustrated House gives up on his young patient, forcing Cuddy to re-think her decision to hold back the truth. | |||||
49 (3-03) | "Informed Consent" | David Foster | Laura Innes | September 19, 2006 | Congestive heart failure secondary to senile cardiac amyloidosis |
Now that the medicine has worn off, House is back to using his cane and doesn't want to talk about it. His new patient is Ezra Powell, a renowned medical research pioneer who collapsed in his lab. House puts Ezra through diagnostic rigors, but the team is unable to come up with a conclusive diagnosis and Ezra's health continues to deteriorate. Becoming increasingly debilitated, Ezra ultimately demands that the team stop the litany of medical tests and help him end his life. The team members have divergent opinions on the morality of helping Ezra die, especially since the possibility of a cure is still in question. Meanwhile, the teenage daughter of a clinic patient has developed a crush on Dr. House. | |||||
50 (3-04) | "Lines in the Sand" | David Hoselton | Newton Thomas Sigel | September 26, 2006 | Baylisascaris |
House takes the case of Adam, a 10-year-old severely autistic boy who screams loudly for no apparent reason. The team wonders why House is taking the case. House claims he just wants a patient who can't lie, but it seems he relates to this kid. In fact, House actually envies him; living in a shell has its advantages. But when Cuddy makes a minor change to House's office and House refuses to use the office until it's returned to its original state, he finds himself wandering the hospital in need of a temporary home, crashing in Cuddy and Wilson's offices. Meanwhile, teenager Ali from the previous episode still has a crush on House and is becoming a nuisance around the hospital. | |||||
51 (3-05) | "Fools for Love" | Peter Blake | David Platt | October 31, 2006 | Hereditary angioedema |
House takes the case of a young woman who has been rushed to the hospital with problems breathing and severe stomach pain after she and her husband were robbed. After her husband collapses, the team believes the couple's illnesses are related. Meanwhile, Michael Tritter, a clinic patient, causes problems for House that could have serious ramifications. | |||||
52 (3-06) | "Que Será Será" | Thomas L. Moran | Deran Sarafian | November 7, 2006 | Small cell lung carcinoma |
A morbidly obese man is found in a coma and admitted to the hospital. Upon waking, he demands to be discharged, and refuses to be tested for any disease possibly caused by his weight. | |||||
53 (3-07) | "Son of Coma Guy" | Doris Egan | Dan Attias | November 14, 2006 | MERRF syndrome |
House decides to awaken a comatose patient so he can question the man regarding the family history of his son, who may have a genetic condition and the father is the only living relative. Meanwhile, Wilson confronts House about the stolen prescription pad as Tritter approaches Cameron, Chase, and Foreman in an attempt to divide the team and reveal their loyalties. | |||||
54 (3-08) | "Whac-A-Mole" | Pamela Davis | Daniel Sackheim | November 21, 2006 | Chronic granulomatous disease |
House's newest patient is 18-year-old Jack, brought to the hospital after experiencing a heart attack and massive vomiting. Barely an adult himself, Jack has been the parent to his younger brother and sister since their parents died. After a brief review of his file, House thinks he's got the diagnosis, seals it in an envelope and turns the process into a game, challenging Cameron, Foreman and Chase to figure it out on their own. Meanwhile, in an attempt to extract a confession, Tritter makes it almost impossible for Wilson to practice medicine, driving a friendship-ruining wedge between House and Wilson. | |||||
55 (3-09) | "Finding Judas" | Sara Hess | Deran Sarafian | November 28, 2006 | Erythropoietic protoporphyria |
House and the team take on the case of Alice, a young girl with pancreatitis. Since her divorced parents can't agree on how to proceed with her treatment and won't let House bully them into making a decision, House's only option is to take them to court and let a judge rule on the matter. Meanwhile, House's reduced access to Vicodin is beginning to take its toll and he hits Cuddy up for more of the medication, but instead of writing a prescription, she strictly rations his pills. Detective Tritter wants House to find a non-addictive way to cope with his pain before House kills somebody. | |||||
56 (3-10) | "Merry Little Christmas" | Liz Friedman | Tony To | December 12, 2006 | Langerhans cell histiocytosis |
It's Christmas at Princeton-Plainsboro and Wilson has a present for House. He and Detective Tritter have struck a deal and House has three days to accept it. Cuddy receives a patient afflicted with dwarfism, who has a variety of symptoms and is recovering from a recently collapsed lung, and House takes on the case. Cuddy is eventually forced to make a difficult and potentially life-threatening choice between her patient's life and House's life. | |||||
57 (3-11) | "Words and Deeds" | Leonard Dick | Daniel Sackheim | January 9, 2007 | Spinal meningioma |
House is forced to respond in court to the criminal charges against him regarding illegal possession of narcotics, and the judge sets a date for a preliminary hearing. Cuddy insists that House apologize to Detective Tritter. Meanwhile, the most recent case at the hospital is a firefighter suffering from disorientation and extreme body temperatures. Because of misinterpreted information, the firefighter is eventually forced to make a decision to undergo a radical brain treatment which will have a serious effect on his current life. | |||||
58 (3-12) | "One Day, One Room" | David Shore | Juan J. Campanella | January 30, 2007 | Chlamydia and pregnancy due to rape |
House has beaten the drug charges and is back at the hospital after a short stint in rehab. Tired of House's disdain for patients, Cuddy turns his clinic duty into a game, with the stakes raised to a level that speaks to House: challenge. There, House encounters the patient Eve, who has tested positive for an STD and admits she has very recently been raped. She refuses to be treated by anyone but House. Cameron encounters a homeless man who is very different from how he originally seemed. | |||||
59 (3-13) | "Needle in a Haystack" | David Foster | Peter O'Fallon | February 6, 2007 | Undigested toothpick |
16-year-old Stevie Lipa is admitted to Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital with a serious respiratory condition and internal bleeding. He's assigned to House, but House is busy fulfilling a dare given to him by Cuddy. A startling secret is revealed about Stevie, and the team encounters troubles with his parents. Foreman is forced to ask Stevie to lie directly to his parents, risking his medical license. | |||||
60 (3-14) | "Insensitive" | Matthew V. Lewis | Deran Sarafian | February 13, 2007 | Diphyllobothrium latum causing Vitamin B12 deficiency |
A girl with the rare inability to feel pain gets in a car accident. Once her testing is done, she begins having high fevers with multiple seizures and is rapidly deteriorating. | |||||
61 (3-15) | "Half-Wit" | Lawrence Kaplow | Katie Jacobs | March 6, 2007 | Takayasu's arteritis |
A brain-damaged music savant (Special Guest Star Dave Matthews) has seizures despite being on anti-seizure medications, while everyone is shocked to learn that House has entered himself for brain cancer treatment. | |||||
62 (3-16) | "Top Secret" | Thomas L. Moran | Deran Sarafian | March 27, 2007 | Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia |
House treats a US Marine returning from Iraq, who has symptoms consistent with Gulf War Syndrome. House's dream about the Marine complicates his handling of the case. | |||||
63 (3-17) | "Fetal Position" | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner | Matt Shakman | April 3, 2007 | Maternal mirror syndrome (Emma) Non-immune hydrops fetalis (Emma's baby) |
A famous, pregnant photographer, Emma Sloan, is brought to the hospital after suffering a stroke in the middle of a photo shoot with Tyson Ritter. Although Emma’s condition initially stabilizes, her health takes a turn for the worse when her kidneys inexplicably fail. As her health continues to deteriorate, Emma is more concerned about her baby’s well-being than her own. Meanwhile, the secret relationship between Cameron and Chase is exposed to Foreman and Cuddy, and House makes extravagant plans to take a much-needed vacation. | |||||
64 (3-18) | "Airborne" | David Hoselton | Elodie Keene | April 10, 2007 | Decompression sickness (Peng) Mass hysteria (Other passengers) Methyl bromide poisoning (Fran) |
House and Cuddy face a widespread outbreak on their plane back from a symposium in Singapore while Wilson and the team treat a woman with constant seizures. | |||||
65 (3-19) | "Act Your Age" | Sara Hess | Daniel Sackheim | April 17, 2007 | Precocious puberty due to externally applied testosterone |
A 6-year-old girl suffers ailments expected in patients much older. Tensions between Chase and Cameron lead House to intentionally assign them to the same tasks, including investigating the young girl's home. | |||||
66 (3-20) | "House Training" | Doris Egan | Paul McCrane | April 24, 2007 | Staphylococcus aureus infection |
A con-artist loses her ability to make decisions. While House and the team struggle to find the underlying cause the case becomes personal for Foreman. | |||||
67 (3-21) | "Family" | Liz Friedman | David Straiton | May 1, 2007 | Histoplasmosis |
A 14-year-old leukemia patient's only hope of survival is a bone marrow transplant from his younger brother. But when he gets sick, the team must race against time to save both kids. Meanwhile, Foreman must deal with the consequences of the previous patient's death. | |||||
68 (3-22) | "Resignation" | Pamela Davis | Martha Mitchell | May 8, 2007 | Bacterial infection due to suicide attempt |
Speculation over Foreman's resignation continues, while a young girl named Addie is admitted after bleeding from the mouth during martial arts practice. House and Wilson are secretly concerned about each other. | |||||
69 (3-23) | "The Jerk" | Leonard Dick | Daniel Sackheim | May 15, 2007 | Haemochromatosis |
House meets his match in the form of Nathan Harrison, an obnoxious 16-year-old chess prodigy with intense head pain and behavioral issues, who manages to annoy and offend every member of House's team during his course of treatment. Meanwhile, Foreman's frustration with House reaches a new level when he believes House sabotages his job interview with another hospital. | |||||
70 (3-24) | "Human Error" | Thomas L. Moran & Lawrence Kaplow | Katie Jacobs | May 29, 2007 | Congenital heart defect (infected third ostium) |
House and the team take on the case of a young woman who, along with her husband, is rescued at sea en route from Cuba in a desperate attempt to see House and get a diagnosis for her illness. During her stay in the hospital, she develops a new symptom: her heart stops - but she keeps talking... Meanwhile, Foreman prepares for his last day at Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital. |
Season 4: 2007-2008
Episode # | Title | Writer(s) | Director | Original airdate[5][6] | Final Diagnosis |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
71 (4-01) | "Alone" | Peter Blake & David Shore (teleplay) Peter Blake (story) | Deran Sarafian | September 25, 2007 | Allergic reaction to cephalosporins in misidentified patient |
When an office building collapses, House has to work fast to diagnose a young woman, Megan, who survived the disaster. Due to her injuries, Megan's only form of communication is blinking. House, without a team since Foreman and Cameron quit and he fired Chase, talks through his ideas with a janitor at the hospital. As House persists in diagnosing Megan by himself, he realizes that the case is not what it appears, and that solitude may not be the answer. | |||||
72 (4-02) | "The Right Stuff" | Doris Egan & Leonard Dick | Deran Sarafian | October 2, 2007 | Von Hippel-Lindau disease |
House is approached by a fighter pilot named Greta, a candidate for NASA’s astronaut training program. Greta suffers from a neurological disorder in which she is converting visual images to sound, or hearing with her eyes. Knowing that NASA would reject any possibility of her becoming an astronaut if they knew of her problem, Greta begs House to treat her in secret. Meanwhile, House is ruffled when he thinks he sees Cameron, Chase and Foreman in the hospital hallways. | |||||
73 (4-03) | "97 Seconds" | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner | David Platt | October 9, 2007 | Strongyloidiasis |
The final 10 fellowship candidates compete ferociously when House splits them into two teams by gender. They are assigned to diagnose and treat a wheelchair-bound man with Spinal Muscular Atrophy who is slowly suffocating. As the two teams are trying to one-up each other, complications arise. Meanwhile, Foreman runs his own team of fellows in his new job at another hospital, and resorts to using a very “House-like” treatment to help a patient. | |||||
74 (4-04) | "Guardian Angels" | David Hoselton | Deran Sarafian | October 23, 2007 | Ergotism |
While having a seizure, a funeral-home cosmetician hallucinates that she's being violently raped by one of the corpses she's working on. Later in the hospital, she acts as though her dead mother is in the room with her. Meanwhile, Cameron offers advice to one of the seven candidates for House's team; Foreman has lunch with Cuddy. | |||||
75 (4-05) | "Mirror Mirror" | David Foster | David Platt | October 30, 2007 | Eperythrozoon (Rickettsiaceae resulting from exposure to pig feces) |
Foreman returns to the hospital and is assigned to oversee House's team candidates. A man is mugged and suffers from a respiratory arrest. He has no memories of who he is, but instead reads the personality of the most dominant person in the room, applying it to himself to create a temporary identity. His accuracy of being a judge of character intrigues House, who manipulates the man to judge others and ultimately judges whether House is more dominant than Cuddy. | |||||
76 (4-06) | "Whatever it Takes" | Thomas L. Moran & Peter Blake (teleplay) Thomas L. Moran (story) | Juan J. Campanella | November 6, 2007 | Selenosis ("John") Heat stroke and Thallium poisoning (Casey) |
House is recruited by the CIA to help diagnose a deathly ill agent with an unknown illness. The agent's medical case is being spearheaded by Dr. Samira Terzi, who offers up very little information about the agent's history or previous assignments. With limited information to go on, House uses some unorthodox methods to try to crack the code and determine a diagnosis in time to save his mystery patient's life. Meanwhile, Foreman faces resistance from the remaining six fellowship candidates when they question his judgment and argue over the diagnosis of a female drag car racer who passed out after a race. | |||||
77 (4-07) | "Ugly" | Sean Whitesell | David Straiton | November 13, 2007 | Lyme disease |
House and his team are followed by a documentary film crew as they treat a teenager with a major facial deformity who suffered a heart attack prior to a reconstructive procedure. As they work to diagnose the teen, House finds himself distracted by several of the candidates vying for a spot on his team, causing him to question his own motives for having chosen them. | |||||
78 (4-08) | "You Don't Want To Know" | Sara Hess | Lesli Linka Glatter | November 20, 2007 | Autoimmune hemolytic anemia in systemic lupus erythematosis |
House encounters a magician whose heart failed while performing an underwater escape act. While the remaining fellowship candidates work to diagnose the illusionist, House is determined to prove that he's a scam artist faking his ailments to cover up the fact that he nearly drowned during his act. During the testing, House suspects one of his own candidates may have an undisclosed illness. In the meantime, House pits his team against one another in a challenge involving Cuddy, granting the winner immunity from elimination and a chance to nominate two other candidates to be put on the chopping block. | |||||
79 (4-09) | "Games" | Eli Attie | Deran Sarafian | November 27, 2007 | Measles |
House assigns the candidates to a particularly challenging case involving an uncooperative punk guitarist with a history of drug abuse and civil disobedience while Cuddy orders House to make a final decision and hire his new team. House promises a guaranteed position on his team for the candidate who correctly diagnoses the patient. Meanwhile, Wilson informs a former patient he had misdiagnosed him with terminal cancer and is now going to live. | |||||
80 (4-10) | "It's A Wonderful Lie[7]" | TBA | TBA | January 29 2008 | TBA |
House and the team treat a woman who suffers from a sudden paralysis of the hands that causes an injury to her daughter while she's spotting her at an indoor rock-climbing wall. As House probes the woman and her injured daughter for any leads as to what might be causing her condition, House is convinced that the woman is withholding information. When the woman's daughter reveals some very descriptive details about her mother's personal life, House isn't so sure the woman hides anything about herself from the people around her, especially her daughter. As the team runs tests to find out what caused her paralysis, the woman loses her eyesight and her system begins to shut down, and House and the team are baffled as to whether it is the woman herself, or her own physiology that is lying to them. Meanwhile, House lets his team participate in a Secret Santa gift exchange, but he puts his own twist on the holiday tradition. | |||||
81 (4-11) | "Frozen[7]" | TBA | TBA | February 3 2008 | TBA |
When Dr. Cate Milton (guest star Mira Sorvino), a psychiatrist trapped at the South Pole and the research station's only doctor, becomes ill in the middle of her assignment, she and Dr. House are thrust into a long-distance relationship of sorts. Unable to get Cate out or any additional medical supplies to the South Pole station, House and his team must resort to treating her via webcam. House and his team walk the doctor through a series of makeshift and painful diagnostic tests she must perform on herself. Cate pushes back at House's every recommendation, and is unwilling to risk valuable station medical supplies until he can provide valid proof for his diagnoses each step of the way. While House and his team helplessly watch her condition worsen, House's usually icy demeanor surprisingly softens as he searches for ways to save her life. Meanwhile, House does some detective work of his own and is surprised to learn who Wilson has been dating. | |||||
82 (4-12) | "Don't Ever Change[7]" | TBA | TBA | February 5 2008 | TBA |
House and the team encounter a woman admitted to Princeton-Plainsboro after she collapsed at her wedding. Her test results come up negative for a variety of common diseases, which leads the team to suspect foul play. When they discover the woman had been a music producer living in the fast lane until she converted to Hasidic Judaism, House insists that people do not change so easily, and that her seemingly rash decision may have something to do with an underlying condition. The woman's husband insists that House treat his wife for her illness, rather than for her past, but she continues to fall dangerously ill. The team must run through all possible diagnoses without disturbing her newly found religious beliefs before it is too late. Meanwhile, House is preoccupied by Wilson's newly-outed relationship with a woman whose personality is remarkably similar to House's |
References
- ^ "House Episode List - Season 1". TV.com. Retrieved 2007-01-20.
- ^ Another version of the pilot was to be aired in this slot, but 4 minutes of footage was cut out at the last minute. The unaired pilot was then released to specific magazines to promote the show. Source: "House - Unaired pilot". TV.com. Retrieved 2006-12-26.
- ^ "House Episode List - Season 2". TV.com. Retrieved 2007-01-20.
- ^ "House Episode List - Season 3". TV.com. Retrieved 2007-08-26.
- ^ "House Episode List - Season 4". TV.com. Retrieved 2007-08-26.
- ^ "Feast Your Eyes On Fox Tuesday". FOX.com. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
- ^ a b c ""Remaining House episodes for Season 4"". The Futon Critic. Retrieved 2008-01-06.
External links
- FOX.com House Official Site
- Episode List for House M.D. at IMDb
- Episode Guide at The House M.D. Guide
- Television Without Pity House recaps
- epguides.com House Episode Guide
- TVGuide Full list of House Episodes
- Politedissent Reviews of episodes focusing on the medical aspects
- Have-dog.com List of music by episode used in the series