SMART Notebook 18

    : 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.

    : 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.

    : The recovered memory reveals that House, too drunk to drive, called Wilson for a ride; Amber arrived instead. They were on the bus together when the accident occurred. The Medical and Moral Failure

    : House is motivated by an unfamiliar sense of guilt. He ponders the unfairness of a "misanthropic drug addict" surviving while a promising young physician dies.

    For more detailed production history and award information, you can visit the House's Head Wikipedia page and the Wilson's Heart Wikipedia page .

    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.

    : Because amantadine binds to proteins, it cannot be cleared via dialysis. House must inform a devastated Wilson that there is no cure. Major Themes