[s4e16] House's Head (part 2) -

: The episode concludes with Thirteen testing positive for Huntington’s disease, echoing the theme that life is often "unfair" and beyond a doctor's control.

For more detailed production history and award information, you can visit the House's Head Wikipedia page and the Wilson's Heart Wikipedia page . [S4E16] House's Head (Part 2)

: House deduces that Amber was taking amantadine for the flu. The crash caused acute kidney failure, preventing her body from processing the drug and resulting in lethal amantadine poisoning. : The episode concludes with Thirteen testing positive

The finale begins with House suffering from retrograde amnesia following a bus accident. Convinced he witnessed a life-threatening symptom in a fellow passenger before the crash, House undergoes increasingly dangerous procedures—including hypnosis and deep brain stimulation—to retrieve the lost memory. The crash caused acute kidney failure, preventing her

In the second part, "Wilson's Heart," the team discovers Amber is suffering from multisystem organ failure.

: House’s subconscious manifests a guide who prompts him to identify the patient. He eventually realizes her necklace is made of amber, signifying that the "dying patient" is actually Amber Volakis , Wilson’s girlfriend.

This paper examines the two-part Season 4 finale of House, M.D. , comprising the episodes "" (S4E15) and " Wilson’s Heart " (S4E16). It explores how the narrative utilizes a traumatic bus crash to deconstruct Gregory House’s psyche, the fragility of memory, and the "cosmic unfairness" of life. The Quest for Memory

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