I love how the show gets so serious when something bad happens to kids in the hospital, like all of their personalities get thrown out of the window into survival mode, like when the baby went missing, the father abducted his daughter, or when the mother smothered her newborn to death- house literally threw away his cane and started running to save the kid
@@Aemilius46 At least he helped the baby. Even though it has been confirmed in some episodes he does what he does because he cares AND he needs to solve puzzles, there was no puzzle for the baby, he knew what was happening, so he did it because he cares. Not a saint, but at least a semi-decent person
This is a real thing btw, i knew someone like this in elementary school. She wore alot of sunscreen, read another story on a little boy, until the kid was ten years old, all of a sudden he couldn't be outside at all without his skin blistering and burning. Felt so bad
I knew one too. His was REALLY bad. He had to wear one of those clean room suits with a super strong tint window so no sunlight could get to him. It was sad, watching him try to play outside.
and sunscreen for people with it is more for the point a to point b travel to hospitals etc. and they need to be covered up as much as possible. some severe cases requiring surgery require only the skin being cut open to be exposed to light
I agree I had classmate who always wore jackets and pants even in summer. When I asked him he told I wouldn't understand. When I told him Im a going into the field of medicine he admitted he was allergic to sunlight. I understand it's rare but not impossible and I felt bad to those who suffers from this. My heart goes to all
@@Asertix357 Because their urine was dark red, people with porphyria were often recomended by doctors to drink blood, to "fill up on what they lost", usually animal blood. They also only went outside at night, obviously, as no one had invented sun screen, yet. Sometimes their teeth would take a red stain and prolonged attackes would make the gums recede, exposing the teeth, which looked like bloody fangs. The sulfur in garlic can cause an attack of porphyria, too. Which made them avoid it. One of the origins of some vampire myths.
I was diagnosed with EPP at 6 years old. I'm 52 now and this is the first time I've seen this condition portrayed in mainstream media. Mine isn't quite as severe in that surgical lighting doesn't trigger a reaction. Only sunlight but the effects were very similar. It literally feels like being doused in gasoline and lit on fire. Wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy!🤕
Similarly, my brother is allergic to water. He would get bad rashes and hives that looked like burns every time he was exposed. The gradually got worse. He was eventually diagnosed after a few months and now has monthly allergy shots to prevent the anaphylaxis and reaction.
@@Wor_u15 he used to have reactions to straight water (could have certain other drinks with less water content) but now he has monthly allergy shots that prevent reactions.
I’m allergic to sunlight, but it didn’t hit a critical stage until my mid teens. It is mind bending how much exposure happens on a daily basis. I rarely leave my home and had to cover every window, change every lightbulb, and replace my entire wardrobe with UPF fabric. If I do leave the house, I plan everything down to the minute. If I miss reapplying sunblock every hour or accidentally get too much sun during commute, I lose cognitive function and end up unconscious for 4 hours. My time outside the home is spent in full body coverings (not only long sleeves and pants, but gloves, full face mask, sunglasses, hat, scarf, and sunbrella). I look absolutely unhinged. Last Sunday, I had to drive a student to and from a function and arrived home to 4 police officers who were checking on a tip called in that there had been an abduction by a person in a ski mask and gloves. It was very surreal.
I heard anecdotally, that people with light allergy try to move to places with lots of rainy/cloudy weather like Vancouver. Is that true? I know the UV index is lower on cloudy days but a lot of light still makes it through the clouds
This was the episode that Cuddy made a bet with house he couldn't go a week without Vicodin and when Cuddy was trying to get pregnant with IVF. That's why house was being especially nasty and why Cuddy was so upset by the comment. When you're in pain it is so hard to keep your spirits up and even harder to be kind and patient to others no matter who it is. And withdrawal is so so so hard and makes you so irritable. Mix irritable and House together and you get this
No you're wrong this was the episode where Tritter had house cornered, the episode you're talking about with the bet was with the kid who had napthlene toxicity when house performed an autopsy on his dead cat
You are right about him in withdrawal though. Due to the Tritter and intent to distribute narcotics business House was only getting the bare minimum Vicodin.
Doesn't matter who or what is happening in your personal life. House literally ignored a medical diagnosis from one of his team of doctors of his very young patient. He almost cut off a child's arm for crying out loud.
@@lemonadelemon1960 yeah he was very unstable at that moment, but luckily the team he hired did their job and stopped him. That's why he chose people who will challenge him.
@@phoenixplasma1065 I can't remember who the quote is attributed to, but there's a director who said that children make the best actors because they're not constrained by a desire for money or fame.
I hate when separated/divorced parents fight like this when their kid is in the hospital. It made me more scared and sad when I was in the hospital. My mom couldn't stop blaming my dad for things out of his control, and he's the one that made the effort to bring me my favorite stuffed animals and beanie baby....and my gameboy lol. Parents...seriously...if your child is in the hospital, do the kid a damn favor....Put your garbage ego aside and accept that you need to support your child rather than run in circles with the other parent over bullshit. You're just traumatizing your child more. Out of selfishness.
Would she be able to do it with heavy cloud cover and clothes that covered as much skin as possible? That condition must be so hard but glad your mum's grandma was still able to do her hobbies with her family.
I saw something on Ripley's believe it or not where a woman had the same thing, she managed it by tattooing every part of her body she could, it created a layer of protection, enough to block out the reaction so she could live a normal life outside. To each his/her own, it worked for her.
I love how she says “both of you must be carriers.” It is actually true Or she said that so they wouldn’t fight over who’s fault it was and ruin the moment the little one wakes up.
It's true scientifically both of the parents should have the translater on there chromosomes so it could appear on the next generation if only one of them carry it pure or mixed and the other parent don't have it at all then it's impossible to appear on the child but "probably" it can be carried by the child also ... I hope you understand 😅
it wasn't withdrawal, well, it wasn't ENTIRELY withdrawal. Houses leg just hurts that bad. Bad enough that he was willing to break a bone in his hand to distract himself from it.
@@mikeshogunlee Having experienced chronic pain that was barely manageable with pain killers, where the pain killer of choice was the kind that made you more sensitive to everything as a withdrawal symptom, I guess I just counted the pain he was trying to smother coming back full force as part of the withdrawals. Plus, I doubt the leg pain is what was making him literally break out into sweats and shakes.
Really heartwarming that Cuddy lied and said they were both carriers. ❤ Correction: turns out the disease is a recessive trait, so what Cuddy said was actually the truth. Chase was wrong.
No both would have to be carriers for her to develop the symptoms. Its the same as how it is possible for two people with brown eyes to produce a child with blue eyes. The issue the girl has her parents carried as a recessive gene meaning they aren't symptomatic but they both passed the recessive gene giving her a dominant trait.
@@anyabar1987 what Chase said at 7:55 is, therefore, wrong as he said EITHER PARENT could carry it. Erythropoeitic protoporphyeria is indeed autosomal recessive. Cuddy's hesitation to tell the parents how their child got the illness led me to think that it was a dominant trait (only one parent "to blame"), but that would of course have meant that one of the parents also suffered from it. Well spotted. 👍👍👍
@@thecutestlittlemushroom1949 i was basing my statement on what Chase said at 7:55 to House. It is indeed an autosomally recessive trait. Both parents must have it.
Man, if this was my kid I would be so excited when she'd wake up to be able to tell her _"honey! You're not gonna believe this! But you're a vampire! How cool is that?!"_
the fact they were willing to amputate so quickly without a actual diagnosis was wrong. what if she did have a amputation for them to find out afterwards u can’t just get limbs back
I can see it from both sides cause waiting to long can also be bad there was a guy who picked up a radioactive piece of metal and put it away in the pocket of his pants. Sat on it and it was close to his leg. His leg started to rot little by little by the time they amputated they moved almost all of his leg when if they would have done it sooner it would have been a smaller spot. I wouldn’t want to be in that position of what do when it comes to amputation.
When your in a life and death situation where if you do nothing a child could die especially when you can’t seem to find an answer sometimes it’s better to act first then ask for forgiveness because at least the child won’t be dead even if you get it wrong
It's also, remember, _House._ He had a similar issue himself with necrotic tissue in his leg but the surgery he had wasn't enough to fix the damage. He lived every day since then in immense pain and no matter how hard he tried to be cynical and abrupt, he would never inflict that on _anyone_ - especially a child.
My best friend throughout primary school, and the beginning of secondary had this condition. She had it a lot less severe though, and was diagnosed at the age of 2, so she doesn't really remember life before. She could be exposed to the sun without going "purple" (as she called it, because that what a rash looked like after a few days), but she had to wear protection because continued exposure was an issue. It was occasionally painful, but I think the social aspect was the hardest part for her. From end of march till October she had to wear a big floppy hat, cycling gloves, and long sleeves whenever she went outside, which was quite a hassle for a little kid who wanted to play with her friends. She also often had to spend playtime inside bc she had already had too much light exposure that day. And one time she got a reaction of her nose, and some kids kept calling her "Rudolf" for ages. But in the long run she was quite lucky. She could be outside, and she never suffered from liver failure, though she had to checked about 4 times a year
If they did amputate the limbs and find out after. Child will be devastated. Same goes to the parents and would sue the hospital for millions. But no amount of money can fix the child and relationship will future doctors.
There's no legal case to sue. Doctors give you their best diagnosis with the available information. You then are offered treatment which you can accept or refuse. Finding out afterwards with new information while you're trying to save a life doesn't mean you can get sued.
this was the first episode i ever watched. me and my grandma used to love this show. this episode made me wanna be a doctor (sadly i didnt persue that due to mental health issues). i know its a medical drama and things like what house deals with every episode are rare but, it still made my imagination soar as a kid.
I genuinely do want to be a doctor, because of shows like PD cam, Untold stories of the ER, and now House. As well as a UA-camr called ChubbyEmu, he’s so cool lol Rn I’m 16, hopefully someday I’ll pursue it lol
My grandmother was allergic to the sun so anytime she was outside. She had to wear a mask and she had to wear clothes that like covered her limbs completely but that happened to her much later life it was a spontaneous allergic reaction.
@@antithoughtpolice7497 I used to be able to eat seafood, and then one day I decided to get an allergy test because I thought I had may be some slight issues with milk. Turns out I did but nothing serious, but then I found out that I have spontaneously become highly allergic to seafood. It’s very frustrating, but it does happen.
@@divine_scorpio2859 I could eat shrimps and suddenly after some years without eating any I got an allergic reaction from a seafood salad. Not even the seafood itself just from the salad that had contact with the shrimps.
As somebody with this genetic disorder, I feel like I should clarify some things. First, EPP can be caused by either both parents carrying or by a random genetic mutation. Second, EPP is the cutaneous porphyria that usually doesn't result in any outward signs on the skin besides maybe swelling and very rarely blisters, so I'm not sure why they had a lot of red hives. Third, EPP induced liver failure is incredibly rare-only 20 transplants reported in the USA between 1979 and 2004-and it is only speculated as to what causes it, there in no firm conclusion as to why it happens. Additionally, the youngest patient in the US to receive a liver trnasplant for EPP liver disease was 13, with the average age being 31, so Alison having liver failure so young is rather implausible. Sidenote, if you want to read more about EPP liver disease see "Liver Transplantation for Erythropoietic Protoporphyria Liver Disease" authors McGuire B. M. et. al Fourth, EPP affects people differently. Cuddy is way jumping to conclusions when she lists off all the accommodations they will need. I lead a fairly normal light and do not have reactions to normal, indoor light, although I have no reason to know what surgery lights would do. There's probably no reason to homeschool, although this case may be far more severe than my own, so all I'm saying is that it depends on the situation and they shouldn't just assume the worst Fifth, I was on beta carotene for more than six years, and personally did not feel that it was effective. That is not to say that it cannot be, but I have not been able to find any scientific journal to prove or disprove its effectiveness. Actually, I read in a journal several years ago that beta carotene is used because scientists noticed it played a role in protecting plants from the sun and so they started prescribing it because there were no harmful side effects. There are also several other options for medication: cimetidine, which is still in trials for figuring out what doses are most effective, and afamelanotide, which I started this previous summer that I find to be effective, although I wasn't keen to test the limits. I will note that the latter is age barred by the FDA in the US, so it could not be used in this situation, as she is not 18. There are a few other potential treatments, but I don't feel that I know enough to explain them Finally, the fact that they went with flesh eating bacteria first and didn't even think of EPP except by accident is both crazy and makes a lot of sense. At least in my experience, EPP is not well known at all. I had my first reaction when I was 1 or 2, although my parents thought that I had been bitten by bugs because we were at the lake. Then we finally went to the doctor when I was three, but the doctor had no idea what was going on because my only symptoms were localized swelling, itchiness, and pain, so they told me to come back if it got worse. It was actually my grandmother watching the news and seeing a story about somebody with EPP and connecting the dots that gave me a diagnosis when I was somewhere around twelve or thirteen. Then we had to fight with the doctors to get them to test me. That was years ago, but I doubt that most doctors would even know what EPP is, much less be able to diagnose is without any direction to start.
I forgot to mention, I personally find sunscreen to be not effective, which I believe to be due to blue, purple, and UV lights setting off reactions, while sunscreen is mainly effective against UV light. I just wear long sleeves, gloves, a hat, closed toed shoes, and long pants when I plan to spend time in the sun
Cuddy told the parents that they both must have been carriers because the daughter hoped her parents would get back together. If they thought it was only one of them that gave this to her, they would fight even more. Also, this is TV. They don't have enough time to make all the details perfect. I am sorry you have this and wish you the best.
(I remember this being called the Vampire's illness due to the light allergy. As well this or something close to it actually being the reason behind the Vampire lore as there have been bodies found with elongated canines shaped into fangs with stakes through he heart. Genetic testing done on the remains showed that whoever those people were also had an issue with Garlic. Thus the myth and legend of the Vampire came to be. I don't remember the name of the show or Doucmentry and there was more to this but that was just the basics.
@@OrangeCat1992 yup. Can say from personal experience if they don't find somthing super obvious from a blood draw they tell you your fine and send you home. I almost died from a brain tumor 4 years ago because the er couldn't be bothered to do a cat scan until it was almost too late. Doctors can be arrogant uncaring bastards.
@@clumsykitten0076 I’m sorry that happened to you! That’s so scary! It took me 11 years to get officially diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. I know so many people that just don’t go to the doctor anymore because it’s pointless.
@@catpiqno yes I agree. My daughter has a rare disorder and her doctors don’t have a clue yet won’t listen to her. You’d think with rare disorders the doctors would be wanting to collect data etc. They just basically treat her symptoms and ignore her till she’s i. The emergency room. I’m soF’N scared I’m a walking time bomb.
It would be great if we can have more doctors that can think beyond a wrong diagnosis. Sometimes Dr House will get the diagnosis wrong. There is no need to punch a fellow colleague who made a better diagnosis.
The reason for that was because he was off Vicodin for the week, due to a bet he and Cuddy made. He was having withdrawals and it made him lash out, hence why he punched Chase like that.
I know someone with this, they thankfully figured it out in a much easier way though. She has special sunscreen that she has to use when she is in the sun and I think some medicine to help as well but she is still able to go to school and have a normal life.
Remember seeing a family w/ a daughter who had EPP on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. She had to wear long sleeves, pants, gloves, and a hat to cover her skin. The family had super dark blackout curtains, the lights were always off, etc. So the new home had everything she needed: special light bulbs windows that filter the sunlight, they built a huge outdoor play area but covered it in these huge tent covers so that it was shaded from every possible direction of the Sun so that she could play outside and have fun.
I need shows like Dr house.. gosh this is a fucking genius show There has to be someone some character so sarcastic and genius as Dr house.. come on this is an beautiful show Add like 1 million episode to this series and i will still watch it every damn day
I have a friend who is actually allergic to heat, she is got some insane antiallergens for it too. But in the summer if she stands in the sun for even a minute you can see her skin go absolutely crazy, but if she's in the sun with AC blowing on her nothing at all.,, needless to say she avoids hot tubs and saunas like the plague
I felt bad for house because of all the pain he was going through and he had to deal with it without the vikadin none of the other pills had worked for him. Ik its not an excuse for how he acted but he also was in pain and it was hard to watch him be in that pain like that. I wish that cop could have just got over it instead of trying to ruin his life and all of his other friends life
After my mom had my little brother she was allergic to sunlight. She was miserable. But once she got on medication she was fine. It was a hormonal thing, at least that’s what the dr. Said.
there was a kid at my school who was allergic to light. always had sores on her skin, but we knew it was an allergic reaction so we weren’t scared to touch her. made it partway through high school and then she couldn’t go to school any more. we still saw her sometimes, really pale and in a wheelchair. i still don’t know what was wrong with her. she was really smart and friendly. from what i heard i get the vibe that she was basically born with a time limit. being allergic to light was just one symptom. i wonder if she’s still alive, or if she might even recover. i hope so
I'm allergic to the sun, and I've a sensitivity to light, so I've got to wear very dark glasses when I'm at home and outside, and I've got to cover up when I go outside. LED lights help a little bit, but not much. I get picked on good naturally by friends about being a Vampire, and I even make jokes about being a Vampire. My allergy was discovered until I was an adult, and I knew then why the sun always made me sick and why I broke out in hives from being in it. It took a great doctor who listened to me, and knew what he was doing.
The very first thing I thought about light sensitivity, was some kind of proto porphyria . One of the first presenting features of these kind of protoporphyria is photosensitivity and rashes . Whenever there is photosensitivity with systemic involvement, we must run thorough tests about haeme products , to rule out this
Almost anything rare (or that's incorrectly considered rare) takes years and years on average to diagnose. People get diagnosed with something common that looks somewhat similar.
I have an allergy to the sun- but with biological treatment it is much better. I did not look like her- but I could literally see my skin go red after under a minute of sunlight- and painful. My airways swell up as well. Sucks big time. Did not have this problem as a child, not until I was around 35...
I'm allergic to sun, heat and humidity. I shut down during the day (so I keep the sunblocker drapes closed. My brain starts to function when there is electric light. I still try and have the drapes open a bit on cloudy days to ease depression. But I get a lot of writing, reading, etc. during the night. I am a diagnosed Night Owl.
Do you know whether you have a mast cell disorder, EPP, or something else? Im dx'd with a mast cell disorder, sleep phase disorder and photosensitive migraine. I wonder now if the sleep disorder and headaches are from an inflammatory reaction to light. like you i usually cant think straight til the sun goes down.
I got MRSA (flesh eating staph) from an infected needle when i was 4, i dont remember the pain but i remember all the bumps, the long hospital stay, the IV in my foot. We should have sued but they didnt know it would cause long term illnes, which it does. I get cysts often, and stys. I also got cellulitis in my eye. So yes young cute kids can pass from all kinds of illnesses. I was lucky i guess.
My mother has this condition though a less extreme form. She gets welts over affected skin it got better as she got older though. My grandmother also had a problem and had to wear perscription sunglasses all day even inside otherwise she would get massive migraines.
It feels weird to me that someone could potentially be allergic to a mass less particle that theoretically should have zero effect on the body. But then I remember why we have Melinin. Also I hope chase got an apology
the parents fighting over the girls treatment reminds me of my parents when I lost feeling in my right foot. I had nerve damage and had two options. Either cut the foot off from above the ankle, or have the affected area removed and have iron rods grafted onto the bones to support the foot. My parents were separated, mother obviously had custody because we never allow the fathers to have their kids. I asked the nurse to have him contacted and they explained it all to him and then him to me. Agreed cutting the foot would be the better option. Would be easy to manage with a prosthetic foot. But then in come mother, throwing her weight around. "I'm the mother, I have the final say." Nurse explained it all, told them that I wanted it removed and, when she heard father agreed with me, ordered them to do the other option because, and I quote "I aint having that bastard have any say in my sons treatment."
@@EvaLinds bare in mind i was a minor As for the parents. The nurse yeeted my father out of the room and made him go to reception since he only had access rights on a Sunday once a fortnight. Mum signed all the paperwork for the metal pins and rods to be grafted into my leg to this day, I still have both legs, but need a cane to even go to the corner shop. And im only 34.
@@AzguardMike , I don't know what to say... Excepted that it's a good thing you have both of your legs and you can still walk. (Even If you have to use a cane).
I have photophobia and am on 3 medications that exacerbate it, I don't get burned but I'm blind during the day. On the plus side I can see in the dark way better than any person has the right to...
Children today with parents never think of rye syndrome but it does happen but it only happens pretty much if they give their kids baby aspirin or aspirin
House:Lets cure her with sunshine and puppies
Chase: but she allergic to light
House: so...just puppies?
Yay!
LOL
He ever noticed that through his little I'm angry f*** y** guys ran that he literally broke his voice for a different time
@asmer192 5:18-5:20 I didn't mean to laugh so hard bc its just acting but that got me lol
I read this in their voices.
I love how the show gets so serious when something bad happens to kids in the hospital, like all of their personalities get thrown out of the window into survival mode, like when the baby went missing, the father abducted his daughter, or when the mother smothered her newborn to death- house literally threw away his cane and started running to save the kid
It’s worse suffering as a kid so I think that’s why it’s serious
Yeahhhh, House is such a Drug addicted, Criminal, Piece of crap, saint! 🙄
@@Aemilius46 At least he helped the baby. Even though it has been confirmed in some episodes he does what he does because he cares AND he needs to solve puzzles, there was no puzzle for the baby, he knew what was happening, so he did it because he cares. Not a saint, but at least a semi-decent person
@@Aegon1 True, true!
They even assault each other
This is a real thing btw, i knew someone like this in elementary school. She wore alot of sunscreen, read another story on a little boy, until the kid was ten years old, all of a sudden he couldn't be outside at all without his skin blistering and burning. Felt so bad
That is so hurts.. Omg.. Kids..
I knew one too. His was REALLY bad. He had to wear one of those clean room suits with a super strong tint window so no sunlight could get to him. It was sad, watching him try to play outside.
Yeah I'm allergic to sunlight, heat, and my sweat. Not fun. Luckily it's not so severe but I live in Florida.
and sunscreen for people with it is more for the point a to point b travel to hospitals etc. and they need to be covered up as much as possible. some severe cases requiring surgery require only the skin being cut open to be exposed to light
I agree I had classmate who always wore jackets and pants even in summer. When I asked him he told I wouldn't understand. When I told him Im a going into the field of medicine he admitted he was allergic to sunlight. I understand it's rare but not impossible and I felt bad to those who suffers from this. My heart goes to all
I loved how Chase came to his conclusion because he was acting childish. He really is House 2.0.
I am so glad I am not allergic to light that would be insane
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ue At least you wouldn't have to drink the blood of the living like other vampires.
@@Asertix357 Because their urine was dark red, people with porphyria were often recomended by doctors to drink blood, to "fill up on what they lost", usually animal blood. They also only went outside at night, obviously, as no one had invented sun screen, yet. Sometimes their teeth would take a red stain and prolonged attackes would make the gums recede, exposing the teeth, which looked like bloody fangs. The sulfur in garlic can cause an attack of porphyria, too. Which made them avoid it. One of the origins of some vampire myths.
@@AdamMPick That's so cool. Thanks for sharing.
@@AdamMPickwoaaaahh
I was diagnosed with EPP at 6 years old. I'm 52 now and this is the first time I've seen this condition portrayed in mainstream media. Mine isn't quite as severe in that surgical lighting doesn't trigger a reaction. Only sunlight but the effects were very similar. It literally feels like being doused in gasoline and lit on fire. Wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy!🤕
I don't want to impose too much just rly curious... What is life like if you can't even go outside?
Does sunscreen prevent the reaction?
You take vitamin D right
Thank you for sharing your story.
a real life vampire.. at least half of the way there
Similarly, my brother is allergic to water. He would get bad rashes and hives that looked like burns every time he was exposed. The gradually got worse. He was eventually diagnosed after a few months and now has monthly allergy shots to prevent the anaphylaxis and reaction.
ive heard of a disorder where anytime your skin touches water your pores bleed. i dont think its an allergy tho
How does your brother drink
@@Wor_u15 he used to have reactions to straight water (could have certain other drinks with less water content) but now he has monthly allergy shots that prevent reactions.
60% of our bodies are water. LOL cool story. So he allergic to himself as well?
@@KawaiiSoulB42 it's called aquagenic urticaria. It's a genuine allergy.
I’m allergic to sunlight, but it didn’t hit a critical stage until my mid teens. It is mind bending how much exposure happens on a daily basis. I rarely leave my home and had to cover every window, change every lightbulb, and replace my entire wardrobe with UPF fabric. If I do leave the house, I plan everything down to the minute. If I miss reapplying sunblock every hour or accidentally get too much sun during commute, I lose cognitive function and end up unconscious for 4 hours. My time outside the home is spent in full body coverings (not only long sleeves and pants, but gloves, full face mask, sunglasses, hat, scarf, and sunbrella). I look absolutely unhinged. Last Sunday, I had to drive a student to and from a function and arrived home to 4 police officers who were checking on a tip called in that there had been an abduction by a person in a ski mask and gloves. It was very surreal.
I’m sorry that that happened to you
Sorry you’re allergic to the sun that severely! I have to cover up too will break out in hives but never been unconscious!
I heard anecdotally, that people with light allergy try to move to places with lots of rainy/cloudy weather like Vancouver. Is that true? I know the UV index is lower on cloudy days but a lot of light still makes it through the clouds
@@RainAngel111 yep, look Heloise Viviers in Prince Rupurt! They moved from South Africa to Canada
I'm so sorry you have to live this way.
It must be impossibly hard
This was the episode that Cuddy made a bet with house he couldn't go a week without Vicodin and when Cuddy was trying to get pregnant with IVF. That's why house was being especially nasty and why Cuddy was so upset by the comment. When you're in pain it is so hard to keep your spirits up and even harder to be kind and patient to others no matter who it is. And withdrawal is so so so hard and makes you so irritable. Mix irritable and House together and you get this
No you're wrong this was the episode where Tritter had house cornered, the episode you're talking about with the bet was with the kid who had napthlene toxicity when house performed an autopsy on his dead cat
You are right about him in withdrawal though. Due to the Tritter and intent to distribute narcotics business House was only getting the bare minimum Vicodin.
we always hurt the ones we care about.
Doesn't matter who or what is happening in your personal life. House literally ignored a medical diagnosis from one of his team of doctors of his very young patient. He almost cut off a child's arm for crying out loud.
@@lemonadelemon1960 yeah he was very unstable at that moment, but luckily the team he hired did their job and stopped him. That's why he chose people who will challenge him.
nobody talking about how crazy good of an actress the little girl is??
There's a reason why they chose her to play the role.
I thought it real because I saw someone commented that it real
nice thing about kids acting is they have to act like kids. But still I get what you mean, she did good to act serious and all that.
@@tartoey5this would not be recorded and edited over music if this was real 😭
@@phoenixplasma1065 I can't remember who the quote is attributed to, but there's a director who said that children make the best actors because they're not constrained by a desire for money or fame.
I hate when separated/divorced parents fight like this when their kid is in the hospital. It made me more scared and sad when I was in the hospital. My mom couldn't stop blaming my dad for things out of his control, and he's the one that made the effort to bring me my favorite stuffed animals and beanie baby....and my gameboy lol.
Parents...seriously...if your child is in the hospital, do the kid a damn favor....Put your garbage ego aside and accept that you need to support your child rather than run in circles with the other parent over bullshit.
You're just traumatizing your child more. Out of selfishness.
amen
💔
always devolves to "I'm the mother so I have the final say! Get lost!"
Couldn’t agree more
Every word is true.
7:30
I love how Chase is the one this time who has a House-like realisation
where going to turn you into a fish tank and filter your blood just like in a fish tank are you excited?
He was wrong about the puppies!!
This was one of Chase's, and the shows best moments, he saved that little kid from being amputated and crippled for life
And I like how house was the one who was wrong
Chase was the closest resemblance of House
“Just take a damn bite, kid ok?” 0:20 he’s so good with kids 😂😂
cut her arm and leg off cause they are reacting to sun light makes total sense to me🤣
Not really
He's funny 😅
House saying that to Cuddy in the shower..
House yelling at the doctors..
😭 Not me crying during a short clip from an episode
she allergic to light because she's a vampire like you🤣🤣🤣
My moms grandma was allergic to sunlight, she loved gardening with my mom so she would always do it after the sunset or before the sunrise
Clever
Would she be able to do it with heavy cloud cover and clothes that covered as much skin as possible? That condition must be so hard but glad your mum's grandma was still able to do her hobbies with her family.
@@Jemini4228 I’m not sure, I assume she could but I’ll have to ask my mom. She really seemed like an amazing person in my moms life
allergic to sunlight to and I am in horticulture
@@Jemini4228 clouds dont work but clothes do
I saw something on Ripley's believe it or not where a woman had the same thing, she managed it by tattooing every part of her body she could, it created a layer of protection, enough to block out the reaction so she could live a normal life outside. To each his/her own, it worked for her.
That’s the coolest thing no way
That's pretty smart rly. And talk about a justified reason to mod your body 😅
I love how chase is the one with the epiphany.
I love how she says “both of you must be carriers.” It is actually true Or she said that so they wouldn’t fight over who’s fault it was and ruin the moment the little one wakes up.
you said it wouldn't hurt *cries*
It's true scientifically both of the parents should have the translater on there chromosomes so it could appear on the next generation if only one of them carry it pure or mixed and the other parent don't have it at all then it's impossible to appear on the child but "probably" it can be carried by the child also ... I hope you understand 😅
@@maroualaggoun2815its about it being a dominant or not some disease require both genes some only one
(whose)
no it means the kid isnt the father, she cheated on him, the bio father has the disease
Watching House manage withdrawals and also managing how he really feels about condemning a kid to one diagnosis or another was _fascinating._
it wasn't withdrawal, well, it wasn't ENTIRELY withdrawal.
Houses leg just hurts that bad. Bad enough that he was willing to break a bone in his hand to distract himself from it.
@@mikeshogunlee Having experienced chronic pain that was barely manageable with pain killers, where the pain killer of choice was the kind that made you more sensitive to everything as a withdrawal symptom, I guess I just counted the pain he was trying to smother coming back full force as part of the withdrawals.
Plus, I doubt the leg pain is what was making him literally break out into sweats and shakes.
Really heartwarming that Cuddy lied and said they were both carriers. ❤
Correction: turns out the disease is a recessive trait, so what Cuddy said was actually the truth. Chase was wrong.
No both would have to be carriers for her to develop the symptoms. Its the same as how it is possible for two people with brown eyes to produce a child with blue eyes. The issue the girl has her parents carried as a recessive gene meaning they aren't symptomatic but they both passed the recessive gene giving her a dominant trait.
@@anyabar1987 what Chase said at 7:55 is, therefore, wrong as he said EITHER PARENT could carry it. Erythropoeitic protoporphyeria is indeed autosomal recessive. Cuddy's hesitation to tell the parents how their child got the illness led me to think that it was a dominant trait (only one parent "to blame"), but that would of course have meant that one of the parents also suffered from it. Well spotted. 👍👍👍
@@thecutestlittlemushroom1949 i was basing my statement on what Chase said at 7:55 to House. It is indeed an autosomally recessive trait. Both parents must have it.
Yes a noble lie
@@meehow72 cuddy probably hesitated because both parents hated each other already.
Chase saved the day. He was the one who had these ´´realisation moments´´. It is good that, in the end, he becomes the ´´new House´´.
Man, if this was my kid I would be so excited when she'd wake up to be able to tell her _"honey! You're not gonna believe this! But you're a vampire! How cool is that?!"_
Seems like the best way to break it to the kid that they are allergic to light, give it some sort of fun spin.
I mean yeah I'd say that too lol. But I'd tell her she doesn't have to drink blood, just fruit punch. XD
My daughter would be SOOOOOO stoked!!!
I love this comment of yours
It's not cool to live with.
the fact they were willing to amputate so quickly without a actual diagnosis was wrong. what if she did have a amputation for them to find out afterwards u can’t just get limbs back
Very disturbing.
And if they wait too long to have a solid diagnosis, she could die from flesh eating bacteria. That's the dilemma.
I can see it from both sides cause waiting to long can also be bad there was a guy who picked up a radioactive piece of metal and put it away in the pocket of his pants. Sat on it and it was close to his leg. His leg started to rot little by little by the time they amputated they moved almost all of his leg when if they would have done it sooner it would have been a smaller spot. I wouldn’t want to be in that position of what do when it comes to amputation.
When your in a life and death situation where if you do nothing a child could die especially when you can’t seem to find an answer sometimes it’s better to act first then ask for forgiveness because at least the child won’t be dead even if you get it wrong
It's also, remember, _House._ He had a similar issue himself with necrotic tissue in his leg but the surgery he had wasn't enough to fix the damage. He lived every day since then in immense pain and no matter how hard he tried to be cynical and abrupt, he would never inflict that on _anyone_ - especially a child.
My best friend throughout primary school, and the beginning of secondary had this condition. She had it a lot less severe though, and was diagnosed at the age of 2, so she doesn't really remember life before. She could be exposed to the sun without going "purple" (as she called it, because that what a rash looked like after a few days), but she had to wear protection because continued exposure was an issue. It was occasionally painful, but I think the social aspect was the hardest part for her. From end of march till October she had to wear a big floppy hat, cycling gloves, and long sleeves whenever she went outside, which was quite a hassle for a little kid who wanted to play with her friends. She also often had to spend playtime inside bc she had already had too much light exposure that day. And one time she got a reaction of her nose, and some kids kept calling her "Rudolf" for ages. But in the long run she was quite lucky. She could be outside, and she never suffered from liver failure, though she had to checked about 4 times a year
she's allergic to light just like James at work is🤣
I think this is really the episode where you realize Chase is the new House
3:57 I love how the subtitles capitalize the words every time we touch like the song
If they did amputate the limbs and find out after. Child will be devastated. Same goes to the parents and would sue the hospital for millions. But no amount of money can fix the child and relationship will future doctors.
There's no legal case to sue. Doctors give you their best diagnosis with the available information. You then are offered treatment which you can accept or refuse. Finding out afterwards with new information while you're trying to save a life doesn't mean you can get sued.
at the time, with information that they have, it's either amputation or death.
this was the first episode i ever watched. me and my grandma used to love this show. this episode made me wanna be a doctor (sadly i didnt persue that due to mental health issues). i know its a medical drama and things like what house deals with every episode are rare but, it still made my imagination soar as a kid.
I hope you’re doing okay. Mental health issues can be hard, and I get that. You got this.
My First too. Since that, never stopped
I genuinely do want to be a doctor, because of shows like PD cam, Untold stories of the ER, and now House. As well as a UA-camr called ChubbyEmu, he’s so cool lol
Rn I’m 16, hopefully someday I’ll pursue it lol
What stopping u just a mental health so what take medicine go classes go college my brother has bipolar and he went to a psychiatrist
@@lycansoot you got plenty of time! i hope to see you in the medical field one day :3
7:37 chase has a house moment
My grandmother was allergic to the sun so anytime she was outside. She had to wear a mask and she had to wear clothes that like covered her limbs completely but that happened to her much later life it was a spontaneous allergic reaction.
There was a nun episode that was allergic to copper, and she had a copper IUD. Sometimes allergies build up like a balloon then pop
@@antithoughtpolice7497 I used to be able to eat seafood, and then one day I decided to get an allergy test because I thought I had may be some slight issues with milk. Turns out I did but nothing serious, but then I found out that I have spontaneously become highly allergic to seafood. It’s very frustrating, but it does happen.
@@divine_scorpio2859 I could eat shrimps and suddenly after some years without eating any I got an allergic reaction from a seafood salad.
Not even the seafood itself just from the salad that had contact with the shrimps.
Severe strawberry allergy that showed up in my 30s.
I remember this episode struck my fear nerve. I fear me or my family might lose a limb because of a misdiagnostic
My mum had this happen to her
Me being allergic to sunlight and glad that no doctor tried to cut my hand off when I first had an attack lmao
Love how House gives no thought to catching an assault charge while already under police investigation.
Seriously Hugh Laurie deserves so much credit for his acting than what he gets...
He won several awards for this show what are you on about
He won many awards for his portrayal of House and the show was massively successful when it was running
He just goes on talking about the little girls diagnosis, as if he didnt just get decked in the face!!!🤣🤣
Bro had to
8:07- DANG. That was a heck of a punch Chase took.
She'll be ok. If lockdowns taught us anything, it's that going outside sucks
She’ll be ok theres allergy medicine to prevent reactions
That's not the les-ok nevermind
@@ssniper-mb7js 😭😭
@@bottle3124 nope, this one isn't a true allergy. The light is litteraly destroying her blood cells
As somebody with this genetic disorder, I feel like I should clarify some things.
First, EPP can be caused by either both parents carrying or by a random genetic mutation.
Second, EPP is the cutaneous porphyria that usually doesn't result in any outward signs on the skin besides maybe swelling and very rarely blisters, so I'm not sure why they had a lot of red hives.
Third, EPP induced liver failure is incredibly rare-only 20 transplants reported in the USA between 1979 and 2004-and it is only speculated as to what causes it, there in no firm conclusion as to why it happens. Additionally, the youngest patient in the US to receive a liver trnasplant for EPP liver disease was 13, with the average age being 31, so Alison having liver failure so young is rather implausible. Sidenote, if you want to read more about EPP liver disease see "Liver Transplantation for Erythropoietic Protoporphyria Liver Disease" authors McGuire B. M. et. al
Fourth, EPP affects people differently. Cuddy is way jumping to conclusions when she lists off all the accommodations they will need. I lead a fairly normal light and do not have reactions to normal, indoor light, although I have no reason to know what surgery lights would do. There's probably no reason to homeschool, although this case may be far more severe than my own, so all I'm saying is that it depends on the situation and they shouldn't just assume the worst
Fifth, I was on beta carotene for more than six years, and personally did not feel that it was effective. That is not to say that it cannot be, but I have not been able to find any scientific journal to prove or disprove its effectiveness. Actually, I read in a journal several years ago that beta carotene is used because scientists noticed it played a role in protecting plants from the sun and so they started prescribing it because there were no harmful side effects. There are also several other options for medication: cimetidine, which is still in trials for figuring out what doses are most effective, and afamelanotide, which I started this previous summer that I find to be effective, although I wasn't keen to test the limits. I will note that the latter is age barred by the FDA in the US, so it could not be used in this situation, as she is not 18. There are a few other potential treatments, but I don't feel that I know enough to explain them
Finally, the fact that they went with flesh eating bacteria first and didn't even think of EPP except by accident is both crazy and makes a lot of sense. At least in my experience, EPP is not well known at all. I had my first reaction when I was 1 or 2, although my parents thought that I had been bitten by bugs because we were at the lake. Then we finally went to the doctor when I was three, but the doctor had no idea what was going on because my only symptoms were localized swelling, itchiness, and pain, so they told me to come back if it got worse. It was actually my grandmother watching the news and seeing a story about somebody with EPP and connecting the dots that gave me a diagnosis when I was somewhere around twelve or thirteen. Then we had to fight with the doctors to get them to test me. That was years ago, but I doubt that most doctors would even know what EPP is, much less be able to diagnose is without any direction to start.
I forgot to mention, I personally find sunscreen to be not effective, which I believe to be due to blue, purple, and UV lights setting off reactions, while sunscreen is mainly effective against UV light. I just wear long sleeves, gloves, a hat, closed toed shoes, and long pants when I plan to spend time in the sun
Cuddy told the parents that they both must have been carriers because the daughter hoped her parents would get back together. If they thought it was only one of them that gave this to her, they would fight even more. Also, this is TV. They don't have enough time to make all the details perfect. I am sorry you have this and wish you the best.
@@heatherjunker967 Cuddy was right, there's just a second possible way to end up with it. Sorry if that part was confusing
All doctors know what EPP is, they have to know 99.99% of diseases
How are you gonna say it effects people differently then get surprised when someone breaks out in hives because it (doesn't usually happen)
That punch from house was great
(I remember this being called the Vampire's illness due to the light allergy. As well this or something close to it actually being the reason behind the Vampire lore as there have been bodies found with elongated canines shaped into fangs with stakes through he heart. Genetic testing done on the remains showed that whoever those people were also had an issue with Garlic. Thus the myth and legend of the Vampire came to be. I don't remember the name of the show or Doucmentry and there was more to this but that was just the basics.
There was a movie about twin sisters who were allergic to sun. The parents had to take them cross country to get treated.
I remember that movie
The town turned on them and harassed them to the point they had to leave
If you remember the movie, what is the name of it?
Would have been smarter if chase went to stop the surgery first.
Also he gets his payback on house years later
I don't think Chase could because it technically wasn't his patient/his call. He needed House to do it.
This is what scares me. Too many times the doctors go off half cocked not knowing what’s actually wrong.
It’s the opposite actually. Most doctors ignore problems until it’s a crisis point or the patient dies.
@@OrangeCat1992 no its really just both
@@OrangeCat1992 yup. Can say from personal experience if they don't find somthing super obvious from a blood draw they tell you your fine and send you home. I almost died from a brain tumor 4 years ago because the er couldn't be bothered to do a cat scan until it was almost too late. Doctors can be arrogant uncaring bastards.
@@clumsykitten0076 I’m sorry that happened to you! That’s so scary! It took me 11 years to get officially diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. I know so many people that just don’t go to the doctor anymore because it’s pointless.
@@catpiqno yes I agree. My daughter has a rare disorder and her doctors don’t have a clue yet won’t listen to her. You’d think with rare disorders the doctors would be wanting to collect data etc. They just basically treat her symptoms and ignore her till she’s i. The emergency room. I’m soF’N scared I’m a walking time bomb.
I know it's just a show, but I'm glad a call came through before surgery started...😢
I guess she could go as a vampire for Halloween
I would if it were me.
I did lol
That’s actually hardd
is that why they're so white colored, covered in some sunscreen powder?
It would be great if we can have more doctors that can think beyond a wrong diagnosis. Sometimes Dr House will get the diagnosis wrong. There is no need to punch a fellow colleague who made a better diagnosis.
have you seen the episode or am i missing sarcasm?
The reason for that was because he was off Vicodin for the week, due to a bet he and Cuddy made. He was having withdrawals and it made him lash out, hence why he punched Chase like that.
Didn't you see that pause and his face after the punch..... He realised he was being paranoid and facing withdrawal symptoms
@@linuxbasic3399most people in the comment are idiots who haven't seen the episode or the show and decide to complain/comment/whatever anyways
The way that little girl broke her down in two sentences...Emmy!
I know someone with this, they thankfully figured it out in a much easier way though. She has special sunscreen that she has to use when she is in the sun and I think some medicine to help as well but she is still able to go to school and have a normal life.
It would have been perfect if Chase called House an idiot as well.
"that's why the liver is shutting down..you idiot."
Transformation complete haha
Remember seeing a family w/ a daughter who had EPP on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. She had to wear long sleeves, pants, gloves, and a hat to cover her skin. The family had super dark blackout curtains, the lights were always off, etc. So the new home had everything she needed: special light bulbs windows that filter the sunlight, they built a huge outdoor play area but covered it in these huge tent covers so that it was shaded from every possible direction of the Sun so that she could play outside and have fun.
Im so proud of Chase.
I need shows like Dr house.. gosh this is a fucking genius show
There has to be someone some character so sarcastic and genius as Dr house.. come on this is an beautiful show
Add like 1 million episode to this series and i will still watch it every damn day
that mother jab was insane
I lived with someone that was allergic to sunlight and oof....her skin sometimes...I felt so bad.
I have a friend who is actually allergic to heat, she is got some insane antiallergens for it too. But in the summer if she stands in the sun for even a minute you can see her skin go absolutely crazy, but if she's in the sun with AC blowing on her nothing at all.,, needless to say she avoids hot tubs and saunas like the plague
4:36 incredible scene
I felt bad for house because of all the pain he was going through and he had to deal with it without the vikadin none of the other pills had worked for him. Ik its not an excuse for how he acted but he also was in pain and it was hard to watch him be in that pain like that. I wish that cop could have just got over it instead of trying to ruin his life and all of his other friends life
After my mom had my little brother she was allergic to sunlight. She was miserable. But once she got on medication she was fine. It was a hormonal thing, at least that’s what the dr. Said.
I love watching House M.D episodes on the UA-cam channel app
I'm glad they stopped the operation before they amputated her arm.
there was a kid at my school who was allergic to light. always had sores on her skin, but we knew it was an allergic reaction so we weren’t scared to touch her. made it partway through high school and then she couldn’t go to school any more. we still saw her sometimes, really pale and in a wheelchair. i still don’t know what was wrong with her. she was really smart and friendly. from what i heard i get the vibe that she was basically born with a time limit. being allergic to light was just one symptom. i wonder if she’s still alive, or if she might even recover. i hope so
I'm allergic to the sun, and I've a sensitivity to light, so I've got to wear very dark glasses when I'm at home and outside, and I've got to cover up when I go outside. LED lights help a little bit, but not much. I get picked on good naturally by friends about being a Vampire, and I even make jokes about being a Vampire. My allergy was discovered until I was an adult, and I knew then why the sun always made me sick and why I broke out in hives from being in it. It took a great doctor who listened to me, and knew what he was doing.
I'm so glad you got the help you needed. Also, sick name.
And Just Like That, House Is Fired...
Oh, wait, he's the title char, nvm... XD
It would be a great idea if we had a Dr. House Boardgame. The had one for Dr. Ben Casey and Dr Kildaire.
The very first thing I thought about light sensitivity, was some kind of proto porphyria . One of the first presenting features of these kind of protoporphyria is photosensitivity and rashes . Whenever there is photosensitivity with systemic involvement, we must run thorough tests about haeme products , to rule out this
I get the feeling that this is something that would be diagnose fairly immediately.
Try 12 years in my case and 40 something in my second cousin's
Almost anything rare (or that's incorrectly considered rare) takes years and years on average to diagnose. People get diagnosed with something common that looks somewhat similar.
Doctors dont believe you or ignore such wild ideas. This is popular in mass culture but almost like a myth for the real doctors.
So vampirism in simpler terms. I know it the right one but it's just what I call it.
I have an allergy to the sun- but with biological treatment it is much better. I did not look like her- but I could literally see my skin go red after under a minute of sunlight- and painful. My airways swell up as well. Sucks big time. Did not have this problem as a child, not until I was around 35...
I'm allergic to sun, heat and humidity. I shut down during the day (so I keep the sunblocker drapes closed. My brain starts to function when there is electric light. I still try and have the drapes open a bit on cloudy days to ease depression. But I get a lot of writing, reading, etc. during the night. I am a diagnosed Night Owl.
Do you know whether you have a mast cell disorder, EPP, or something else? Im dx'd with a mast cell disorder, sleep phase disorder and photosensitive migraine. I wonder now if the sleep disorder and headaches are from an inflammatory reaction to light. like you i usually cant think straight til the sun goes down.
I dated a guy that was allergic to sunlight :(
Me too I date a guy was allergic to the sun light. We was together for over 2 years and really change my life also
vampires be pretending iTs AlLeRgY. Sured dude...
@@linuxbasic3399 Bro 💀💀😂😂
@@linuxbasic3399 when you don't have a name for it, it's easiest to just explain it as a sun allergy. It makes it easier for people to understand
This is never short on Drama!!!
I got MRSA (flesh eating staph) from an infected needle when i was 4, i dont remember the pain but i remember all the bumps, the long hospital stay, the IV in my foot. We should have sued but they didnt know it would cause long term illnes, which it does. I get cysts often, and stys. I also got cellulitis in my eye. So yes young cute kids can pass from all kinds of illnesses. I was lucky i guess.
I love House’s “my god, what have I done” look after he punches Chase.
It is very real and I feel so bad for the ones that are suffering from this 😢
My mother has this condition though a less extreme form. She gets welts over affected skin it got better as she got older though. My grandmother also had a problem and had to wear perscription sunglasses all day even inside otherwise she would get massive migraines.
My mother too
As a doctor Mike fan, if anyone has any allergy to anything,give a dang epipen and cure with that. ESPECIALLY to a kid.
EpiPen isn't a cure. It's temporary until you can be given an actual medication to stop the reaction.
@@aprilinaugust99 yea, thx 😊
An epipen doesn't cure you, it helps you stay alive long enough to get to the hospital. I'm allergic to bees so I know this from experience.
Epipen won’t work. It is an enzyme deficiency in the steps to forming hemoglobin. It’s not a true allergy, but a chemical reaction in the blood.
Bro really said “it’s gonna cost you an arm and a leg” I’m dying😂😂💀💀
I thought the lady said “we’re gonna use this to clean you butt” 😂 2:38
Shes the most adorable vampire I've ever seen.
Punched, bitten, stabbed...
Chase was the one who got more action. In more ways than one.
Another episode that showcases Chase slowly becoming House’s true successor
Ironically, kinda like a real life vampire besides the immortality and blood drinking.
House feeds her peanut
Shines light in her mouth
"A reaction. Must be the peanuts."
There's a movie about this condition , well in her case it was only sunlight, its called Midnight Sun , really emotional movie
3:20
Cuddy: How is it going ?
Little Girl: BORING
It feels weird to me that someone could potentially be allergic to a mass less particle that theoretically should have zero effect on the body. But then I remember why we have Melinin. Also I hope chase got an apology
I feel so bad for the people who are in the Hospital
the parents fighting over the girls treatment reminds me of my parents when I lost feeling in my right foot. I had nerve damage and had two options. Either cut the foot off from above the ankle, or have the affected area removed and have iron rods grafted onto the bones to support the foot. My parents were separated, mother obviously had custody because we never allow the fathers to have their kids. I asked the nurse to have him contacted and they explained it all to him and then him to me. Agreed cutting the foot would be the better option. Would be easy to manage with a prosthetic foot. But then in come mother, throwing her weight around. "I'm the mother, I have the final say." Nurse explained it all, told them that I wanted it removed and, when she heard father agreed with me, ordered them to do the other option because, and I quote "I aint having that bastard have any say in my sons treatment."
@AzquardMike ,
What Happend After, To You ?
And Your Mother....I Mean...Big Karen....Did She Get Kicked Out ?
@@EvaLinds bare in mind i was a minor
As for the parents. The nurse yeeted my father out of the room and made him go to reception since he only had access rights on a Sunday once a fortnight. Mum signed all the paperwork for the metal pins and rods to be grafted into my leg
to this day, I still have both legs, but need a cane to even go to the corner shop. And im only 34.
@@AzguardMike ,
I don't know what to say...
Excepted that it's a good thing you have both of your legs and you can still walk. (Even If you have to use a cane).
I have sun allergy. not nearly as bad as EP. mine is much more manageable i just stay out of direct sunlight. i couldnt imagine this level :(
yeah same
I have photophobia and am on 3 medications that exacerbate it, I don't get burned but I'm blind during the day. On the plus side I can see in the dark way better than any person has the right to...
I love it when House is wrong.
'i dont wanna eat'
"its a magic sandwich"
'but I'm not hungry'
"just take a damn bite"
Me
As a future mum xD
The old days they referred to it as vampirism in modern day it is autoimmune condition called porphyria.
This is called Sun Light Urticaria which means she’s allergic to sunlight
I'm allergic to the sun. Break out in blisters and hives. I have medically tinted car windows and walk around with a giant umbrella
You rarely see House so upset. It shows you he really does care about the patients. He just doesn’t want to show it.
It’s cause his leg was hurting, not because of the situation itself
Idk, I really don't think he cares. In this instance, he's off his pain meds.
He was having withdrawals
Children today with parents never think of rye syndrome but it does happen but it only happens pretty much if they give their kids baby aspirin or aspirin
This Hugh Laurie guy should continue pursuing acting he could be famous
He's so old
@@Awwacko how is age relevant?
You’re joking right (sorry I have autism I have trouble telling if it’s a joke or not)
@@weavercs4014 retirement
@@Awwacko how is age relevant though? You haven't answered
I can't believe they let her watch draw the line!
That's terrible I feel so bad for her😯😦😰😱😔
That "im scared" is heart breaking.
Withdrawal is literally the worst. And it makes you really irritable. Put House and irritable together and you get this lol
You can thank Tritter for that
The cop that's obsessed with House because House didn't worship him