diagnostic realism
3.6/5
Season 6 Episode 4
A billionaire's son is diagnosed with primary antiphospholipid syndrome while the Dibala case continues to pressure the team.
Air date: Oct 12, 2009
diagnostic realism
3.6/5
overall
3.5/5
procedure realism
3.4/5
workflow realism
3.3/5
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.
2 cases identified
Case 1
This card captures the episode's main supported diagnosis, syndrome, exposure, or solved medical thread.
Case 2
This is distinct because it changes consent, disclosure, safety, access, professional accountability, or diagnostic framing.
A billionaire's son is diagnosed with primary antiphospholipid syndrome while the Dibala case continues to pressure the team.
This draft keeps each case tied to a concrete supported symptom, diagnosis, exposure, procedure, treatment decision, or care-process risk. Educational differential details should be expanded only after transcript review.
The main diagnosis or care-process issue is plausible at the recap-supported level. The largest limitation is television compression of testing, consent, consultation, and follow-up.
Episode evidence: iDRief catalog page, House Wiki - Instant Karma. Medical context is stored on topic and case cards from trusted patient, public-health, clinical, ethics, toxicology, emergency-care, and behavioral-health sources.
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.