RampageTest
Season 1: 2004–2005
editEpisode # | Title | Director | Writer(s) | Original airdate | Final Diagnosis | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 (1-01) | "Pilot" | Bryan Singer | David Shore | November 16, 2004 | ||
A 29-year old preschool teacher (guest star Robin Tunney) collapses in her classroom from a seizure. She is taken to Princeton-Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, where Dr. House and his team of experts struggle to solve the mystery. | ||||||
10 (1-10) | "Histories" | Dan Attias | Joel Thompson | February 8, 2005 |
Tuberculoma and rabies | |
Dr. Foreman believes an uncooperative homeless woman is faking seizures to get a meal ticket at the hospital. But her situation strikes a chord with Dr. Wilson and he resolves 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" | Nelson McCormick | Lawrence Kaplow and Thomas L. Moran | February 15, 2005 |
Naphthalene poisoning | |
While trying to figure out why a young patient will not stop bleeding after a car wreck, House accepts Cuddy's challenge and goes off Vicodin for a week in exchange for no clinic duty for a month. As House's withdrawal symptoms become severe, his methodology for his patient are more harsh and risky, and Foreman and Cameron are afraid he may not be thinking clearly enough to save the patient's life. | ||||||
12 (1-12) | "Sports Medicine" | Keith Gordon | John Mankiewicz and David Shore | February 22, 2005 | ||
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 will have to abort her early pregnancy, something Hank does not want. Meanwhile, Foreman dates a pharmaceutical representative and House is stuck with an extra ticket to a monster truck rally. | ||||||
13 (1-13) | "Cursed" | Daniel Sackheim | Matt Witten and Peter Blake | March 1, 2005 | ||
After consulting an Ouija board, a young boy believes he is going to die, and is sent to Princeton-Plainsboro after suffering from pneumonia. Dr. Chase's estranged father (guest star Patrick Bauchau) comes to the hospital and helps House diagnose the kid. | ||||||
14 (1-14) | "Control" | Randy Zisk | Lawrence Kaplow | March 15, 2005 | ||
Billionaire entrepreneur Edward Vogler donates $100 million to Princeton-Plainsboro and becomes the new Chairman of the Board. Vogler intends to turn the clinic into a profitable venue for his biotech venture and plans to eliminate House's financially draining department. Meanwhile, a businesswoman has it all – perfect life, perfect body, perfect job – until she finds herself inexplicably paralyzed. When he diagnoses her condition, House must risk his job and his medical license to save her. | ||||||
15 (1-15) | "Mob Rules" | Tim Hunter | David Foster and John Mankiewicz | March 22, 2005 | ||
House is placed under a court order to determine what is ailing a mobster due for federal testimony and the Witness Protection Program. The witness's brother, a lawyer, works against the team and the testimony when his brother is diagnosed with Hepatitis C. Cuddy continues to battle Vogler over House's importance to the hospital. | ||||||
16 (1-16) | "Heavy" | Fred Gerber | Thomas L. Moran | March 29, 2005 |
Cushing's disease secondary to pituitary adenoma | |
House and his team investigate an overweight ten-year-old girl who has a heart attack. Adding to his stress, Vogler demands House get rid of a member of his team. |
Season 2: 2005–2006
editEpisode # | Title | Director | Writer(s) | Original airdate | Final Diagnosis | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
23 (2-01) | "Acceptance" | Dan Attias | Russel Friend & Garrett Lerner | September 13, 2005 | ||
House is brought in for a consult on a Death Row inmate (guest star LL Cool J) with mysterious symptoms. Cameron feels the hospital's resources are better used elsewhere for 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" | Deran Sarafian | Lawrence Kaplow | September 20, 2005 | ||
A nine-year-old cancer patient is brought before House after she experiences hallucinations. House figures out a way to help her, but it will involve serious risk. They discover she has a tumor on her heart, but when it turns out to be benign, the team decides a clot may be navigating her body. | ||||||
25 (2-03) | "Humpty Dumpty" | Dan Attias | Matt Witten | September 27, 2005 |
Endocarditis due to psittacosis | |
Cuddy feels responsible when her handyman falls off her roof then exhibits weird symptoms. House's team amputates the handyman's hand to prevent the spread of infection, but when the other hand starts showing similar signs, they must seek out the source before it kills the patient. | ||||||
27 (2-05) | "Daddy's Boy" | Greg Yaitanes | Thomas L. Moran | November 8, 2005 | ||
A student who just graduates from Princeton experiences severe spasms at a graduation party. Meanwhile, House's parents drop by but he is reluctant to see them, igniting curiousity among the hospital staff | ||||||
28 (2-06) | "Spin" | Fred Gerber | Sara Hess | November 15, 2005 | ||
A famous cyclist is brought to Princeton-Plainsboro after collapsing during a race. He is surprisingly honest about several illegal medications and techniques he applies to himself, but his sickness is not caused by any of these. |