Grey's Anatomy

Season 10 Episode 14

You've Got to Hide Your Love Away

You've Got to Hide Your Love Away is curated around osteosarcoma and li-fraumeni syndrome, degloved left leg, li-fraumeni syndrome.

Air date: Mar 6, 2014

diagnostic realism

3.9/5

overall

3.9/5

procedure realism

3.9/5

workflow realism

3.9/5

Medical Cases in This Episode

These are the patient stories worth unpacking. Open any case for the real-world medicine, what the episode shows, what it leaves out, and source-backed context.

3 cases identified

Case 1

Rory Williams: Osteosarcoma and Li-Fraumeni Syndrome

Medical topic: Osteosarcoma and Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. This case connects the episode's patient presentation to diagnostic reasoning, treatment choice, consent, escalation, and follow-up risk.

Episode shows
Rory Williams is documented in the episode medical notes with diagnosis: Osteosarcoma, Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. Treatment listed for the case includes Surgery.
Clinical takeaway
Medical topic: Osteosarcoma and Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. This case connects the episode's patient presentation to diagnostic reasoning, treatment choice, consent, escalation, and follow-up risk.
Accuracy 3.9/5rory-williams-osteosarcoma-and-li-fraumeni-syndrome-1

Case 2

Lisa Campbell: Degloved left leg

Medical topic: Degloved left leg. This case connects the episode's patient presentation to diagnostic reasoning, treatment choice, consent, escalation, and follow-up risk.

Episode shows
Lisa Campbell is documented in the episode medical notes with diagnosis: Degloved left leg. Treatment listed for the case includes Cefazolin, Debridement, Degloved leg repair, Vacuum dressing.
Clinical takeaway
Medical topic: Degloved left leg. This case connects the episode's patient presentation to diagnostic reasoning, treatment choice, consent, escalation, and follow-up risk.
Accuracy 3.9/5lisa-campbell-degloved-left-leg-2

Case 3

Ariel Williams: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome

Medical topic: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. This case connects the episode's patient presentation to diagnostic reasoning, treatment choice, consent, escalation, and follow-up risk.

Episode shows
Ariel Williams is documented in the episode medical notes with diagnosis: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome.
Clinical takeaway
Medical topic: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome. This case connects the episode's patient presentation to diagnostic reasoning, treatment choice, consent, escalation, and follow-up risk.
Accuracy 3.9/5ariel-williams-li-fraumeni-syndrome-3

Episode Summary

You've Got to Hide Your Love Away uses Rory Williams: Osteosarcoma and Li-Fraumeni Syndrome; Lisa Campbell: Degloved left leg; Ariel Williams: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome as the episode's main medical teaching threads. Each case is kept separate so the page can discuss diagnosis, procedure, patient safety, and communication without merging unrelated patients.

Differential Diagnosis and Testing Logic

The episode requires case-specific reasoning rather than one broad theme. Rory Williams: Osteosarcoma and Li-Fraumeni Syndrome requires clinicians to confirm osteosarcoma and li-fraumeni syndrome with episode-supported findings and appropriate real-world tests. Lisa Campbell: Degloved left leg requires clinicians to confirm degloved left leg with episode-supported findings and appropriate real-world tests. Ariel Williams: Li-Fraumeni Syndrome requires clinicians to confirm li-fraumeni syndrome with episode-supported findings and appropriate real-world tests.

Medical Accuracy Review

The episode is strongest when it connects a visible medical event to a concrete patient outcome. The main compression is workflow: real care would usually involve more imaging review, lab confirmation, consent documentation, specialist coordination, and follow-up than the episode can show.

Sources and Further Reading

Episode evidence: iDRief catalog page, Grey's Anatomy Universe Wiki episode notes, and episode transcript. Medical context: MedlinePlus - Medical Encyclopedia.

Educational Disclaimer

This page is for general education and TV medical analysis only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment guidance. iDRief is independent and is not affiliated with any network, studio, streaming service, hospital, medical school, or rights holder.