Private Practice – Episode 3
Episode Title: In Which Addison Finds the Magic
A show primarily about marriages this week. Pete and his dead wife. Violet and her ex-husband. Naomi and Sam doing more of their infighting. And Addison whining. Plus more bad ethics. I expect this from Dr. House, it’s his shtick, but not from these doctors who are supposedly better and brighter.
Dr. Cooper Freedman
Cooper is brought to see a young girl who is blue. Not depressed, as he thought initially, but the patient actually has blue skin. He asks about dyes, inks, or any topical compounds that could have dyed her skin, but there have been no exposures. There was no other chemical exposure, by history. He ultimately decides that she has methemoglobinemia (an abundance of chemically-damaged hemoglobin in the blood) and treats her, correctly, with intravenous methylene blue. He in unsure what exposure lead to her developing the condition, but she responds to the medication. Over the next day or two, her skin turns blue again, as does the skin of her three younger sisters. One of the girls has a seizure as well. Cooper and the mother search the house, but can find no source of toxicity. He eventually talks the girls into letting him spend the day playing with them and they lead him to their “castle” – a neighbor’s old shed filled with leaking bags of the fertilizer ammonium nitrate. Nitrates are a known cause of methemoglobinemia and the girls are inhaling enough of the fumes to make themselves dizzy and their skin turn blue.
Methemoglobinemia is rare. There is an inherited form of the disease, but the girls have an acquired methemoglobinemia. It is treated with oxygen and 5 minutes of intravenous Methylene Blue followed by a saline flush (a big bag of blue IV fluid shouldn’t just be left hanging like it was in the episode).
Other possible causes of methemoglobinemia include certain older antibiotics, local anesthetics, nitrates, and metoclopramide (Reglan). There are a few unusual household chemicals that may cause it. Well water with a high nitrate content has been known to cause methemoglobinemia.
Inhalation of ammonium nitrate generally causes a nasty headache, cough, and sore throat — symptoms that were missing but would have helped narrow down the type and route of exposure.
I find it hard to believe that a parent who chose to stay at home to raise her kids is not going to notice her four kids regularly disappearing from the yard like that?
Dr. Addison Montgomery and Dr. Pete Finch
Addison has a newlywed couple as her patients who complain that they cannot have sex. Any attempt causes severe pain to the wife. Addison attempts an exam, but even that is too painful for the patient to endure. She diagnosis her with vaginismus. She tries muscle relaxants first, but they do not work. Next she tries trigger point injections combines with guided imagery. That works miraculously.
Vaginismus is a real condition, and difficult to treat. It is almost always psychological in nature.
The best treatment for vaginismus is a combination on counseling, special exercises, time, and understanding. It rarely resolves overnight.
I’ve never heard of muscle relaxants being used as a treatment. I can imagine that benzodiazepines like Valium might work, but more for their psychological effects than the physical ones.
If her problem is indeed caused by overly-sensitive nerves, then trigger point injection might work. Her issues seemed much more psychological to me, though, so I suspect Pete’s therapy did the most good.
For a “world renowned” surgeon, Addison has some lousy bedside manner.
Dr. Violet Turner and Dr. Sam Bennett
Violet has a patient named Doug who is unhappy in his marriage and wants a divorce, but is scared to tell his wife. After three years of therapy, she has finally convinced him to stand up to his wife and tell her what he wants. When he does, his wife’s nose starts to bleed uncontrollably and he brings her to the clinic for evaluation and treatment. Sam is able to control the nosebleed, but the patient’s labs show that she has a moderate anemia (low blood count).
A day or so later, the wife confronts Violet and she once again begins bleeding. Not just a nosebleed this time, but hemoptysis (coughing blood). She is admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with Wegener’s Granulomatosis, a chronic disease caused by inflammation of the blood vessels. After a confrontation with the hospital chief of staff, Sam discovers that the patient has known she has Wegener’s for at least 6 months and never bothered to tell the husband. He and Violet confront both the husband and his wife with the truth, but in the end Doug chooses to stay in his unhappy marriage.
There are good treatments for Wegener’s now, but it can still be a fatal disease. Relapses occur in about 50% of patients, and about 80% suffer some variety of long-term complication (deafness or kidney disease, most commonly). Survival rates vary, depending on the study, but around 75-80% can expect to live at least another 5-10 years with treatment.
No chief of staff is going to overrule an attending physician like that. It’s bad form and it’s not her job. Plus, it will drive doctors from the hospital. Hospitals like doctors, they make them money.
The confrontation in the end may have been within the letter of privacy laws, but clearly against the intent. You don’t threaten patients into sharing information with each other. The wife should have refused to tell them anything and reminded Violet that she had been fired as her husband’s therapist, so her husband would not leave the room with her. (OK, ideally, she should have told her husband the truth in the first place, but how likely was that to happen?).
October 11th, 2007 at 6:05 pm
“I find it hard to believe that a parent who chose to stay at home to raise her kids is not going to notice her four kids regularly disappearing from the yard like that?”
You are on, what, child number one? Trust me, by child number two, you trust them too much, making up for the paranoia of the first. And by the third, you are all to happy to get them out of the house for a few moments, even if it does involve ammonium nitrate.
“A day or so later, the wife confronts Violet and she once again begins bleeding.”
Too bad it is ABC, and we will never see the “Heroesw”/”Private Practice” cross over. (Of course, she would just get eaten by Sylar…)
October 11th, 2007 at 8:45 pm
I’ve never heard of muscle relaxants being used as a treatment. I can imagine that benzodiazepines like Valium might work, but more for their psychological effects than the physical ones.
If her problem is indeed caused by overly-sensitive nerves, then trigger point injection might work. Her issues seemed much more psychological to me, though, so I suspect Pete’s therapy did the most good.
What if one were to use some of those analgesics the drugstores sell for mouth sores? I have vaginismus, & I’ve considered that, but haven’t got around to trying it.
October 11th, 2007 at 11:02 pm
Now they’re searching homes? Why not just call this show “House version 2.0 + worthless emotional BS”?
October 15th, 2007 at 1:47 am
Reading this certainly brought back memories of an old classic, ELEVEN BLUE MEN by Berton Roueché. Your piece inspired me to find an online version…
…which reminds me in that case it was sodium nitrite in diner oatmeal.
December 5th, 2007 at 3:37 am
Just a slight correction, Alan is Violet’s ex-boyfriend, not her ex-husband.
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