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| writer = [[David Holselton]]
 
| writer = [[David Holselton]]
 
| airdate = September 26, 2006
 
| airdate = September 26, 2006
| episode_no = 3.4
+
| episode_no = 3.3
 
| rating = 9.0
 
| rating = 9.0
 
| guest_star = [[Braeden Lemasters]], [[Leighton Meester]]
 
| guest_star = [[Braeden Lemasters]], [[Leighton Meester]]

Revision as of 00:50, 14 August 2013

Season Three Episodes:

  1. Meaning
  2. Cane & Able
  3. Informed Consent
  4. Lines in the Sand
  5. Fools for Love
  6. Que Será Será
  7. Son of Coma Guy
  8. Whac-A-Mole
  9. Finding Judas
  10. Merry Little Christmas
  11. Words and Deeds
  12. One Day, One Room
  13. Needle in a Haystack
  14. Insensitive
  15. Half-Wit
  16. Top Secret
  17. Fetal Position
  18. Airborne
  19. Act Your Age
  20. House Training
  21. Family
  22. Resignation
  23. The Jerk
  24. Human Error

Episodes12345678

Chase: "Parents aren't doing or dosing this kid."
House: "How would you know that? Kid can’t talk. Why do you think I took this case? He's not going to give away the ending."
―Lines in the Sand

Lines in the Sand is a 3rd season episode of House which first aired on September 26, 2006. House is drawn to the case of an autistic boy, apparently only for the reason that the patient can’t communicate well enough to give House any clues as to his condition. However, it’s House’s social skills that are soon at issue when he insists his blood-stained carpet be returned to his office. Meanwhile, a young woman who isn’t Cameron starts finding House irresistible.

Recap

A young severely autistic boy—starts coughing, then screaming. He is taken to Princeton-Plainsboro for examination.

House takes the case, but Foreman thinks the patient is just screaming because of his autism. Cameron is astounded that House believes the parents when they say something is wrong, but House notes that his parents have been caring for him constantly. He orders tests and an environmental scan. He jokes about how difficult it will be to perform a scan on an autistic young boy.

House then goes to Cuddy to demand she put back his blood stained carpet. He tells her he won't use his office until the carpet is returned. When Cuddy resists, he starts shouting "Attica! Attica!", but Cuddy remains unmoved.

As they go to test the patient, his father tells them to wait until he finishes a level on his video game. When Foreman won’t wait, the patient goes wild. They restrain him to get him into the scanner.

Chase and Cameron go to search the patient's house. They discuss why the parents would give up their lives to care for their son.

All the tests are normal, and House is working in the clinic, with his team, to stay out of his office. Cuddy comes in and tells House his behavior isn't going to make her change her mind. House orders his team to take a fecal smear. However, as they go to do the test, the patient starts suffer from a pleural effusion.

House retreats to Wilson's office to do his differential, but as he orders an echocardiogram and antibiotics, Wilson comes in to find them there. He stops House from playing with his things. House asks why Wilson never throws anything out.

Once again, the patient is frantic while Foreman performs the echocardiogram. House retreats to a shared office space. Foreman finds and confirms that the patient has a conduction abnormality. At that moment, Cameron realizes House actually does want his carpet back. Cuddy comes in and throws them out of the shared office. House orders Foreman to do a lung biopsy, but Foreman tricks Wilson into doing it, although Wilson says a lymph node biopsy is a better idea. Once again, the patient is frantic during the procedure. House manages to anesthetize the patient by taking some of the anasthetic himself. The patient follows suit and is knocked out. The parents are impressed. House says it was only the child imitating him.

House, too, wonders why the parents have invested so much into their child. He expresses envy about how the child doesn't have to worry about social graces. The biopsy is negative, but the cells are from his liver although they biopsied his lymph nodes.

House retreats into Wilson's office again. Cameron thinks the misplaced liver cells might be a sign of cancer. If the cells were damaged, they could travel through the body. However, the patient's liver tests are normal. The only explanation seems to be cirrhosis, but the only way he could get it would be for his parents to give him alcohol. Wilson comes back to his office, and retreats himself. House thinks the parents don't want to deal with their son anymore and orders a liver biopsy. House tells Cameron his parents love him unconditionally.

Wilson asks Cuddy to give House back his carpet. However, she refuses.

House takes up residence in Cuddy's office. House asks Foreman for the results of the stool sample, but it's normal. Cuddy comes in and confronts House, but gets him to leave when a phone call informs them that the patient has been taken to the cardiac intensive care unit.

They manage to stabilize the patient, but now the patient's liver is failing. House is concentrating on what the patient might have put in his mouth. He orders Foreman to take samples from the patient's house.

Foreman finds jimson weed, which would explain the symptoms except for the screaming. However, if the patient doesn't have jimson weed poisoning, the treatment for it will make him worse. Testing him will take more time than the patient is likely to live. House goes to the patient and asks him what he ate while holding up the pictures he uses to communicate. The patient grabs the picture for the sandbox and, at the same moment, his eye rotates out of its socket.

House goes to the chapel next. They start talking about why the eye rolled back, but this is also consistent with jimson weed. Foreman thinks it might be a metastasized microtumor, but that would mean they missed three of them. If Foreman is right, it would mean removing the patient's eye.

However, just before the operation, House realizes that the lines the patient has been drawing on his chalkboard are worms in his eye - the only way the patient could communicate the symptom. House examines the patient’s vitreous humor and finds the worms in his eye. He has a parasitic infection which can be treated.

Wilson tells Cuddy that House may have Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism. She doesn't believe him, but he tells her that House took this patient because he reminds him of himself. However, after he convinces Cuddy, he goes to House and tells him it was all a lie - he really is just a jerk. House realizes that the patient will never feel the happiness that normal people feel, and the parents must now feel bad that they must go back to taking care of him. However, as the family is set to leave, the patient hands House his beloved PSP and makes direct eye contact with House. His parents are ecstatic.

House returns to his office and his old blood-stained carpet.

Major Events

  • House starts pestering Cuddy in an attempt to get his original carpet back.
  • Ali returns to the clinic once again.
  • To make Cuddy agree to his terms, House starts using the clinic, Wilson's office and the conference room as places so that he and the Ducklings can discuss their current case.
  • House and Cuddy clash over Ali, House's teenage stalker. Cuddy claims that she's stalking him while House thinks differently on the subject.
  • House finally confronts Ali and tells her that she has an infection which is affecting her judgement.
  • In the end, Cuddy finally gives in and House gets his old carpet back.

Clinic Patients

Avoiding his own office, House is faced with a bevy of inane cases.

The first patient brings in one of her rarely excreted feces for a doctor to look at.

The second patient came in because his serious back pain has gone away - he's feeling great.

The third patient is Ali, a 17 year old girl who had earlier been to the clinic with her father who thinks she too has a common cold. House starts to examine her, and she takes off her top, exposing her breasts, ostensibly so that House can use his stethoscope. Foreman bursts in on them accidentally.

Cuddy confronts House about Ali (she's left 15 messages for him that day) and tells security to keep her out of the hospital. House doesn't think she's dangerous. He shouts "You can't stop our love!" although he makes it clear he isn't interested in her.

Later when House goes to his motorcycle, he finds Ali sitting on it. They start talking about age of consent laws. He reminds her of their age difference - "over ten years". Cuddy catches them and makes Ali leave, threatening her with arrest if she catches her again. She warns House about Ali.

Cuddy tells House Ali is locked in her office. House goes to see her to dissuade her from coming after him. He gives her a spiel from Casablanca. However, as he examines her face, he notices she has milky tears which indicate a fungal infection that is causing a lack of inhibitiion and judgment. She accepts the explanation.

Zebra Factor 2/10

Baylisascaris is a common infection in humans and is ubiquitous in the environment. It can develop anywhere where there are animal feces as it infects more than fifty different species. It is very easy to contract.

Trivia & Cultural References

  • The title is a common idiom [1] representing a point past which a person will not cross or after which advance would not be acceptable. It has several expressions in this episode:
    • House refuses to let his old carpet be removed, and Cuddy refuses to return it;
    • The patient keeps drawing lines to indicate his condition;
    • The patient contracts his disease in his sandbox;
    • House declines to sleep with Ali;
    • Ali points out the age of consent in New Jersey (18) is arbitrary compared to those in other places (such as Iceland, where the age is 14);
    • Cuddy bars Ali from the hospital premises;
    • Cuddy threatens to fire House, but when she does not House reminds her that threats that aren't followed up on indicate weakness.
  • Attica is a reference to the Attica Correctional Facility, a prison in upstate New York that hosted a riot in 1971. House’s chant of “Attica” is from the film Dog Day Afternoon.
  • James Bond is a world famous fictional British spy.
  • Zen is a school of Buddhism, native to China. The miniature sand garden in Wilson’s office were influenced by Zen.
  • "Mel's Diner" was the setting for a popular sitcom from the '70s and '80s, Alice.
  • House’s dialogue in his final scene with Ali is paraphrased from Casablanca, a 1942 film about two former lovers who re-meet years after she leaves him to join her older husband, who she has just learned has not died. The dialogue is taken from the scene where Humphrey Bogart convinces Ingrid Bergman to leave with her husband.
  • This episode is based on a real case from 2005. There, the patient was 7 and suffered similar symptoms before recovering.[2]
  • Upon discovering the jimson weed in the patient's back yard, Foreman suggests that he is "tripping on lucy in the sky." This is a reference to the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds " which itself is believed (though denied by the writer, Lennon) to be a reference to the psychedelic drug, LSD .  

Quotes

Cuddy: "She's dangerous!"

House: "She's not dangerous"

Cuddy: "She's pretty."

House"She's pretty."

Cuddy: "Men are stupid"

House: "I'm with you so far."

Cuddy: "I'm notifying security."

House: "Oh, give me a break, she's not dangerous! She's... insightful. YOU CAN"T STOP OUR LOVE!


House: "(Bursts into operating room) Hey! Don't touch his eye!"
Dr. Simpson: "This is an appendectomy."
House: "(Taken aback but unable to admit his error) Like I said, don't touch his eye."
— Trying to stop surgery on the patient


Previous episode:
Informed Consent

Lines in the Sand
Next episode:
Fools for Love