
I think there are few people who could disagree that House M.D is one of the greatest TV shows in history, and one of the main reasons this show was so watchable (apart from Gregory himself) was that each episode (or two) centered around a medical mystery.
The writers of this show sure did some digging in the medical journals to come up with some of the wildest (but usually true) medical cases on record. WIth eight seasons and over 170 episodes there are many great episodes to choose from, but I think these have the best cases of all.
You can watch House on Amazon Prime Video in the USA. This list is not in ranked order. I use official broadcast episode numbers, but this may differ from some streaming services where multi-part episodes are combined, or where episodes have been removed from some regions.
6
House’s Head / Wilson’s Heart” (Season 4, Episodes 15–16)
This is one of the most controversial arcs in House and led to a ton of debate online and in public when it first aired. It open with House in a strip club (pretty on-brand), but House has no memory of the hours leading up to his being there.
It turns out that House was in a bus crash, and that’s why he lost his memory. Old Greg tries every trick in the book to recover his memory, because he just can’t shake the feeling that he’s forgotten something very important. It turns out that “something” would have a major impact on the series and viewers alike.

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5
“Three Stories” (Season 1, Episode 21)
This episode sees House give a lecture to medical students in the form of three stories of patients with leg pain. It’s one of the better episodes when it comes to the detective doctor at his most acerbic, but it’s also an episode that gives us some insight into House’s past and why he turned out the way he has. The main plot thread here is that House’s ex-girlfriend wants his help in treating her husband, which House first refuses.
However, after working through the cases with the students, he changed his mind.

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4
“Euphoria” (Season 2, Episodes 20–21)
A corrupt cop can’t stop laughing, despite a gunshot wound and pieces of bullet lodged in his brain. House’s team rushes to figure out what’s going on, but then Dr. Foreman starts showing similar symptoms to the officer, who dies shortly thereafter. Now the race is on to save Foreman, and perhaps prevent an outbreak.

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3
“Both Sides Now” (Season 5, Episode 24)
This episode is personally of special interest to me, because the whole reason I became interested in human psychology (and studied it at university) was because of the so-called “split brain” patients. Basically, as a way to control severe seizures, some patients had the connection between the two hemispheres of their brains severed. This confined the seizure to one side of the brain, but to the surprise of researchers and clinicians, it turned out that the two halves of our brains can pretty much operate independently.
In this episode, a person with a split brain starts to show various mysterious symptoms, and his left hand (operated by his mute right brain) seems to be trying to say something, but no one can figure out what. The true reason this episode is so interesting is mainly because it introduces the public to the very real phenomenon of split brains, but also because it poses some pretty mind-boggling questions about what it means to be a person.

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2
“All In” (Season 2, Episode 17)
This whole episode is poker-themed and sees House steal a case from his boss, Dr. Cuddy because he thinks she misdiagnosed a young patient. House and his team sneakily try to diagnose what might be wrong and subject the young boy to a harrowing set of tests. However, it turns out House is trying to solve the case of a patient who died years ago he thinks might have the same thing as the child. A rare disorder called Erdheim-Chester, but the child tests negative for it.
Things go wrong, and the boy suffers cardiac arrest long enough to suffer potential brain damage. House only has enough biopsy material to run three tests, but there are seven potential diseases still on the board. Something, something, going all-in on a game of poker.

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1
“Help Me” (Season 6, Episode 22)
This one is a doozy, and it all starts with House and his team assisting at the site of a major accident. A crane operator fell asleep at the controls, causing a building to collapse with dozens of victims. House assists a woman with her leg trapped under the rubble, and tries to help his team diagnose the crane operator over the phone, for what House believes is a neurological issue that causes a loss of consciousness, not sleep.
Meanwhile, House tries to talk his boss and rescuers out of amputating the trapped woman’s leg, but eventually he’s forced to amputate her appendage with no anesthesia, because time has run out. Meanwhile, every test of the crane operator’s brain seems to indicate it’s fine, despite the poor guy literally bleeding from his eyes.
That’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to House M.D. and the show as a whole is top-tier almost all the time, but do be careful of becoming a hypochondriac! Learning about all of these obscure conditions can have that effect on some people that makes them see symptoms in themselves that don’t add up to an actual disorder.
Even worse, while most of what you see in the show is based on real medical cases, it is still a TV show. A lot of the time things are embellished for drama, or the truth is stretched. In some cases, the writers just get it completely wrong. So don’t take it too seriously—just sit back and say “aah”.
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