Mirror Mirror. Thirteen finally reveals how her mother died when House confronts her about her mother. Thirteen admits she died from Huntington's disease. Thirteen figures she might have it, but House tells her that she's probably just taking in too much caffeine - he switched out her decaf.
Thirteen has not been tested for the Huntington's gene, and House is astounded. While in the episode Thirteen prepares to biopsy House, House awakens and asks if the patient is still alive and Thirteen proceeds with a liver biopsy. House realizes it was Thirteen who drugged him, but she notes he drugged her too. At the end, Thirteen confronts House about testing her for Huntington's. They don't look at the test results, with House dropping it in a trash bin.
You Don't Want To Know. During this season, some Thirteen's personal information is revealed. Thirteen starts displaying signs of self-destructive behaviour and also reveals that she has asthma.
Thirteen is fired but rehired after making a real emotional connection with a patient. However, Thirteen continues on her downward spiral. Thirteen is also forced to become a guinea pig for whatever drugs a hostile patient receives in one of the episodes.
Thirteen suggests an insulinoma about the patient illness, House discloses that she probably has Huntington's. Thirteen denies to the team that she has Huntington's. House tells Thirteen not to feel so bad about being wrong about lymphoma - at least she had a good theory and stuck to her convictions.
He reminds her that dying changes everything, but almost dying doesn't. Dying Changes Everything. A lot of information is revealed about Thirteen, including how she is starting to go out of control after finding out she has Huntington's Disease. Thirteen hooks up with a woman for a one-night stand. Afterwards, the woman suffers a seizure. Cameron asks Thirteen what the patient's name is, but she replies that she doesn't know. Cameron mentions that Thirteen said the patient took drugs about five hours before the seizure.
House becomes intrigued at the thought of the two women together at 3 a. As the team goes through the case file, Thirteen laments that her private life is on display, but also thinks it is just dehydration from drugs. Foreman asks if Thirteen was also taking drugs, but she refuses to answer. Taub reports that the patient had eye hemorrhaging two years ago. Kutner thinks that blood clots could explain everything, but Thirteen dismisses Spencer as a hypochondriac.
House orders a bone marrow biopsy. As Thirteen prepares to draw bone marrow from Spencer, House watches their awkward interaction with amusement.
The patient reacts by stiffening in pain as Thirteen pushes the biopsy needle into her hip. Spencer has been told about House. He chats with Spencer about her sexual experience with Thirteen. Spencer rates Thirteen a seven out of ten. Thirteen angrily tells Spencer that she found the letters she wrote trying to get House to take on her case. She accuses Spencer of sleeping with her to get to House, and Spencer admits she followed Thirteen to a bar to ask for help, but counters that Thirteen was only using her for sex.
Thirteen notes the biopsy results were negative and wants to discharge her. Suddenly, Spencer clutches her chest and the cardiac monitor beeps. Thirteen asks a nurse to get the defibrillator paddles and has to admit the symptoms are real.
In the hospital, the team is shown looking at a spider they found in Thirteen's apartment. Its venom can cause seizures and heart problems. House realizes that an inhaler, also found in her apartment, shows that Thirteen had asthma as a child. Thirteen is the one ordered to check Spencer's body for spider bites. Thirteen admits she doesn't like relationships.
Spencer wants to get to know Thirteen more and as they are about to kiss, Spencer comments that Thirteen didn't need to move her hand and Thirteen realizes that Spencer's hip is numb.
Foreman approaches Thirteen as she observes the surgery. He hands her the results of the Huntington's test he kept House from finding in her apartment.
He realizes she will be symptomatic in a relatively short time and believes her behavior is getting destructive. When they talk about Thirteen's behavior, Foreman tells her that taking drugs, drinking and having sex with strangers isn't what life is all about. She replies that she only wants to live her life to the fullest and that it sounds fun to her. Thirteen lies on an exam table. She looks exhausted and disheveled, giving herself a bag of fluids to combat her hangover. Thirteen hears someone coming, bolts up as best she can, yanks the IV out of her arm, but can't do much more before the door swings open.
It's Cuddy. House enters Cuddy's office to find a tired and rundown Thirteen. Cuddy wants her to take a drug test. Thirteen resists and House denies permission to Cuddy and orders Thirteen to follow him out of Cuddy's office.
Once they're outside in the main area, House lets Thirteen know that Spencer's surgery was not routine because she had stopped breathing. Thirteen missed a differential, and House fires her. He only wanted to save her the humiliation of a drug test and to stop her losing her license. Thirteen studies Spencer's chest x-rays. Foreman apologizes to her about her getting fired, saying they ruled out hypertension. Spencer is now on a treadmill running a methacholine challenge. Foreman thinks Thirteen has been acting like an idiot.
Thirteen realizes that lung cysts wouldn't show up on an x-ray. The treadmill test won't close her airway, but will instead make her lungs explode from a broken cyst. Thirteen rushes in to find Spencer on the floor. She stabs a syringe into the patient, and air escapes from Spencer's chest, allowing her lung to expand. Kutner, Taub, Foreman and Thirteen report the cysts to House. Thirteen thinks it is amyloidosis. House tells them to biopsy the cysts. The team encourages House to bring Thirteen back, but House insists to Thirteen that she is still unwelcome.
House then goes to Thirteen with the results, asking her why she doesn't like men. He figures she likes the challenge of seducing pretty women.
He tells her to tell the patient she has only ten years to live. Thirteen agrees to do it even though she won't get her job back, just so the patient won't have to deal with House. Thirteen explains the diagnosis to Spencer.
She has a disease called LAM. Surgery can remove the cysts, but the cysts replace healthy lung tissue until the lungs stop working.
Spencer drops her head, stunned by this turn, realizing she will eventually die from the disease. Chase and his surgical team remove the cysts from Spencer's lungs. Later, as she lies in recovery, Thirteen tells her what to expect when coping with a fatal condition. Spencer realizes that Thirteen is talking about herself. Suddenly, Thirteen notices blood spreading across the stitches.
She gathers the team. They can't stop the bleeding. Thirteen thinks it is a new symptom: aplastic anemia. House reminds her that she's been fired. The patient may not have LAM, but what she has is probably worse.
House knocks on the glass, motioning for Thirteen to join him. House wants to do a bone marrow transplant and tells Thirteen to get the consent. House doesn't know what it is, but feels a transplant is her only chance.
Thirteen is waiting in House's office and tells him that Spencer agreed to the transplant. House admonishes her. He tells her, "You're gonna keep spiraling, keep screwing around, keep slashing away at every person who tries to help until no one tries to help anymore. Until you hit bottom; until you're dead. House notices that Thirteen's lips are cracked from the use of her inhaler.
He is struck with an idea, and asks if Spencer cried when told she was going to die. Thirteen does not think she did. Thirteen gets her job back, but her self-destructive behavior still continues. Thirteen returns back to her downward spiral, hooking up with new beautiful women and having one-night stands. Lucky Thirteen. With one person shot and other patients needing medical attention, Thirteen agrees to be used as a guinea pig by the patient to prevent him from being tricked into being sedated by the medications they send in to treat him.
With the SWAT team closing in, House is determined to end the standoff the only way he knows how: by coming up with the right diagnosis. When Thirteen agrees to be injected to save the rest of the patients, House tells Thirteen how stupid she is being - the drug is bad for Huntington's patients.
Thirteen collapses in pain. House is trying to figure out the patient and asks him why a diagnosis is so important. The patient reacts in pain to the injection as well. House starts a carotid artery massage to slow his heart. Thirteen wants to get a drug to slow down his heart, and the patient agrees to give her thirty seconds, but only after pointing the gun at the hostage who gave him the lighter so that Thirteen understands that if she doesn't come back, he will kill the boy.
After running outside, Thirteen freezes when she sees police officers. When it seems that Thirteen will not be coming back, the patient acts as if he's about to shoot the boy, but the nurse yells for the patient to shoot her instead. However, at the last second, she decides she does not want to die. Thirteen rushes back in, and no one is shot. The patient once again asks that someone else be injected with the drug first. However, the drug slows the heart rate, and slowing the heart rate of someone who already has a normal heart rate is dangerous.
House objects to this, but Thirteen voluntarily injects herself and passes out with a dangerously low heart rate. House injects the patient and his heartbeat returns to normal. House notices that the patient is only sweating on one side of his face, indicating that it's probably lung cancer.
Thirteen's heart rate continues to fall. House orders the nurse and the boy to help her up to raise her heart rate. They get to radiology. After the CT Scan , House writes something down on a notepad and hands the notepad to one of the hostages. He tells the patient that if he wants the answer, he'll have to give him the gun first. Then he turns about the results of the scan and asks Thirteen what she sees. She replies that it's a starburst caused by the gun he was holding during the scan, obscuring the CT results.
The hostage turns the notepad around and it says "starburst" on it. This proves that Thirteen wasn't just making up what she was saying as a way to get the gun from the patient.
The patient finally gives up the gun and two more hostages leave. House, Thirteen, and the boy who gave up the lighter stay with the patient. House gives the patient back the gun and tells the police that the patient overpowered him. Thirteen starts shouting at House for always having to know the answer and being so afraid to be wrong that he'd even risk the lives of others to figure out the answer. House yells back at Thirteen that he's only arrogant, that's she's the coward for trying to shorten her own life, giving her the illusion of control.
The patient shows a new symptom - partial deafness in his right ear. House thinks it might be Cushing's syndrome. The patient trades the boy for drugs. The patient still wants the drug to be used on Thirteen first. The patient finds out that Thirteen has no more than ten years left to live. House injects the patient. However, there is no improvement in his breathing. Thirteen starts having an increased heart rate and fever. House realizes her kidneys are shutting down. House realizes Thirteen needs more medical care.
House chastises the patient for leaving that out of his history. House orders the drug to treat it, but the police are tired of negotiating with the patient. The patient then says that he'll trade House for the drugs. House realizes that he's going to give Thirteen the drug once again and tells the patient that he'll inject the drug in himself because more drugs would kill Thirteen.
The patient doesn't care, noting that since Thirteen has taken everything that he's taken, any bad reactions she has to it would more accurately reflect what would happen to him.
Thirteen tells House that she'll either die from the drug or the patient will shoot her, so she'll die either way. House leaves the room and we see the patient telling Thirteen to inject herself with the drug. Unlike the previous times where she readily injected herself, this time she is scared and admits that she doesn't want to die.
The police set up the concussive charge outside the room. The patient points his gun at her, threatening her. Thirteen puts the needle closer and closer to her arm, but keeps crying that she doesn't want to die. She tells the patient, "Sometimes you just have to trust people.
After more moments of her moving the needle closer to her arm, she exclaims that she doesn't want to die once more. The patient grows frustrated and slams the gun down and takes the drug, injecting himself, since Thirteen is obviously refusing to do so.
Right at that moment, the side of the room blows up. The patient and Thirteen are both knocked to the floor. The police rush in. House comes back into the room and goes to Thirteen. He asks her why she's still alive. Instead of telling House that she was refusing to take the drug, she lies and tells him that he didn't make her take it. Thirteen wakes up to find Foreman there. He tells her she will need a week of dialysis , but she should recover full kidney function.
He apologizes for leaving the differential. Last Resort. Thirteen learns the nerve degeneration has already started and she probably has 10 more years left to live. Let Them Eat Cake. She is the one who finds Kutner's dead body in his apartment. She tries to bring him back to life, but it's impossible since he died a few hours ago she and Foreman entered into his apartment.
She is shocked because of Kutner's death. She goes, along with Foreman and House to Kutner's parents' house. She assists his funeral, along with everybody except Taub. Simple Explanation. Thirteen is fired by Foreman after Cuddy appoints Foreman the new head of the diagnostics department. Thirteen comes to congratulate him.
She realizes he's angry and he admits he shouldn't be. He realizes Thirteen was just afraid to confront him openly. He is afraid it's going to affect their relationship but he doesn't want to break up with her and realizes he has to fire her.
Epic Fail. Thirteen breaks up with Foreman after he fired her in the previous episode. Thirteen gets on a plane and sets off for Thailand. Instant Karma. Thirteen returns from Thailand. House winds up at Thirteen 's apartment to tell her to come back but Thirteen shuts the door in his face without House saying anything. House finds Thirteen at her gym and asks her for a new differential. Thirteen keeps up her exercise and House realizes she's doing it to treat her Huntington's disease.
Thirteen wants to know why House hasn't just asked her to come back and realizes that he doesn't want to be rejected. House calls to Taub and Thirteen for help. Taub gets a fax and throws it out.
Thirteen also gets a fax and lets it slide to the floor, ignored. Thirteen gets the job she was looking for at the community clinic. Suddenly, Thirteen and Taub call simultaneously to tell House that the patient has Crohn's disease. Thirteen's portrayer, Olivia Wilde, was promoted to the main cast after being a recurring character for three seasons.
However, she only made six appearances in this season. Her name was also added to the opening credits. Thirteen asked for an immediate leave of absence. Foreman says he just ripped it open to find out. Thirteen is going to Rome. Thirteen rebukes him for invading her privacy. Thirteen comes up with an idea - treat Dr. Richardson to get him back on duty. Thirteen goes to Dr.
Chase realizes his stomach lining is damaged and unless they find the cause, nothing is going to work. Thirteen tells Dr. Richardson that the misery will go away if he takes a risky drug.
Chase and Thirteen are discussing the side effects of the drugs they gave Dr. When Thirteen gets confused, Chase admits he is sexually interested in her and was being patient, but with her moving away, his deadline has changed. Before she can reply, Dr. Richardson comes in, feeling much better. The team tells the assistant that Dr.
The Department of Public Hospitals will be there in 20 minutes. When the assistant leaves, Thirteen admits the likely diagnoses are hepatitis and peptic ulcer disease. Thirteen tells Taub she will be flying out the next day. He tells her that he supports her choice to try the new treatment. The DPH is overseeing the shut down. Thirteen says that the hospital is now crawling with bureaucrats. Chase tells them to focus on their patient, who is once again trying to strip.
Taub goes to stop him. Chase wonders why Dr. Foreman thinks it might be a symptom and not a side effect. Richardson lets it slip that he snuck out of the hospital to go to a seafood convention. Chase tries to narrow it down with no luck. However, Thirteen remembers toad eggs can make people high and give them nausea. The antidote is fast acting, so they could get him on his feet quickly. Thirteen tells Richardson that he will feel better in no time if they are right. He offers to fly over to see her, but she says she will be okay.
Richardson is soon on his feet and assures the DPH man that he is fine. He passes a sobriety and cognitive test easily. The DPH man agrees to lift the restrictions. Chase suggests a sending-off party for Thirteen. She wonders if this trick ever works, and Chase assures her it has. She hugs him, and he complains of mixed signals. However, Thirteen doesn't come for the party. Foreman has found out that Thirteen wasn't even scheduled for the experimental treatment and all her phones are disconnected.
She's been lying to them all day. Her sudden departure causes Cuddy to force House to hire a new team member, who would eventually be Martha M. Now What? Thirteen returns after missing for one year. House finds out that as part of her "leave of absence" Thirteen spent the last half of it in jail. House finds out she pled guilty to a charge of excessive prescribing, but realizes that she was charged with another crime and wants to know what she really did, Thirteen puts up her usual wall of privacy and shuts him out.
In an attempt to bring her out, he keeps her away from the hospital by enlisting her skills in controlled combustion to help build a championship calibre "spud gun" to beat one of House's younger rivals who has won the contest for several years running. When the doors open, Thirteen walks out of the prison and is surprised to see House waiting for her. He hands her a martini and she drains it in two mouthfuls.
House is driving Thirteen down the road and he asks what she did. House confirms he knows she pled guilty to excessive prescribing, but wants to know what she really did. Thirteen avoids the question. Thirteen wants to know why House is taking her to the tournament. Navigation menu Personal tools Create account Log in. Namespaces Page Discussion.
Views Read View source View history. This page was last modified on 14 July , at This page has been accessed 23, times. Remy Hadley. House, M. Olivia Wilde. First Appearance. Series Billing. Recurring: 4x02 - 4x09 Billed: 4x10 -. Thirteen is reluctant to reveal information about herself, creating an air of mystery which is partially the reason for House's interest at the beginning. Early on, House tries to guess what her 'big secret' might be, such as asking if she is the "daughter of an alcoholic father".
In "Mirror Mirror", a patient who mirrors the most dominant personality he is with, describes himself as "scared" when alone with her. Not knowing, she explains, allows her to summon the bravery to do things she thinks she cannot do.
House surreptitiously obtains a sample of her DNA and has screening performed, but in the end throws out the unopened envelope containing the results. In the fifth episode of the fifth season, " Lucky Thirteen ", Thirteen says that her Huntington's is more aggressive because the generation that received the gene has more repeats of the CAG triplet of the previous generation, greatly decreasing her life expectancy and hastening the onset of symptoms.
She exhibits self-destructive behavior, using recreational drugs and having repeated one-night stands. House fires her for recklessness but eventually rehires her. Thirteen continues to exhibit self-destructive behavior, which climaxes in the ninth episode "Last Resort" when she risks her life to test medication for a man who took the hospital clinic hostage.
In " 97 Seconds ", she correctly diagnoses a collapsing and disabled patient with Strongyloides, and treats him with ivermectin , but the patient fails to take the pills because his mobility assistance dog eats them, causing the death of not only the patient but the dog as well. House chastises her about not supervising the patient taking the medicine, but does not fire her because he feels she will not make the same mistake again.
Cuddy overrules House's decision, forcing him to accept a woman into the fellowship to create a team of four diagnosticians, realizing only a minute later that this had been House's plan from the start. At the end of the fourth season, Thirteen is diagnosed as having the mutated Huntington gene. After nearly dying from a medicine overdose in "Last Resort", she asks Foreman to admit her to his Huntington's drug trial. Several episodes later, the couple embark on a relationship, which affects Foreman's professional judgment to the extent that he fixes the drug trial, which causes serious side-effects in Thirteen.
Foreman almost loses his medical license in the process and resulting in House ordering the couple to break up. The couple fake a split and continue their relationship in secret, but come public after House discovers they are still seeing each other.
As Foreman takes his position after House quits, he fires Thirteen in "Epic Fail" in order to save their relationship, but they end up breaking up as a result.
In the sixth season episode "Instant Karma", Thirteen buys a one-way ticket to Bangkok, Thailand and is seen boarding the plane at the end of the episode despite Wilson's attempts to prevent her from leaving, in order to convince Thirteen she is the only person on the team that House has not treated badly or manipulated, and that he needs her. Interestingly, this is the high school that Anne Dudek , the actress that played Amber during the 4th and 5th seasons, attended.
In one scene of the Season 6 episode "The Choice," Thirteen has trouble controlling the hand that holds her drink, an indication that her condition is starting to worsen. She subsequently requests a leave of absence in the season finale "Help Me," citing personal reasons. As House and Cuddy skip work the day following the season 6 finale, Thirteen is stuck at the hospital until House returns. Chase briefly proposes having sex with her, who, in turn, is skeptical. In the Season 7 premiere, Foreman finds information about a Huntington's drug trial in, and flight info for, Rome, leading Foreman, Chase, and Taub to believe she is going there.
But she disappears without saying goodbye. Foreman then discovers that all those clues about Rome were purposely planted by Thirteen as a red herring, and no one knows where she went, or why.
Thirteen returns in the show's th episode, "The Dig," [ 9 ] in which it is revealed that she has been in prison for the past six months and grew up in West Virginia. House later tells Thirteen that he is willing to euthanize her if she wants him to do so, once her health deteriorates severely enough. In the following episode, a unknown woman arrives at Thirteen's apartment, with a serious wound to her abdomen.
It is revealed that she is Thirteen's old cell mate when she was in prison. She requests that Thirteen helps her, with the added request she does not take her to hospital as she will be found and presumably taken back to prison.
Due to the fact she cannot be taken to hospital, Thirteen phones Chase to help. She requests he brings certain medication and medical equipment, to which Chase agrees and brings to Thirteen's apartment.
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