:51:01
Now you just take it easy.
:51:04
None of us are so terrific at reading X-rays.
:51:07
What are you looking for?
:51:08
Just put these in an envelope.
Who's reading tonight in Radiology?
:51:11
Dr. Wissenschaft.
:51:15
I want someone reliable to look at them.
:51:17
I'd rather not have everyone
in the Brigham on this.
:51:19
It's bad enough we've got
this nosy X-ray technician.
:51:22
Are you all right?
:51:23
I'm fine. I tried to indicate
this was just a transient thing.
:51:26
A transient ischemic attack,
that's all it was.
:51:29
-He's got his voice back.
-It wasn't an ischemic attack!
:51:32
It wasn't a seizure.
You saw the X-rays, Mason.
:51:34
There was something anterior to the larynx
that looked like a laryngeal sac.
:51:37
That's strictly simian.
I obviously regressed...
:51:40
...to some quasi-simian creature.
:51:48
I'll show these to someone
who can read them right.
:51:50
You're reading them wrong. That's all...
:51:52
...because no one is going to tell me...
:51:54
...you de-differentiated
your goddamn genetic structure...
:51:56
...for four goddamn hours
and then reconstituted!
:52:00
I'm a professor of endocrinology
at the Harvard Medical School!
:52:02
I'm an attending physician
at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital!
:52:05
I'm a contributing editor...
:52:07
...to the American Journal
of Endocrinology!
:52:09
And I'm a fellow and vice-president of the
Eastern Association of Endocrinologists!
:52:13
And president of the Journal Club!
:52:15
And I'm not going to listen
to any more of...
:52:17
...your cabalistic, quantum,
friggin', dumb, limbo mumbo jumbo!
:52:22
I'm going to show these to a radiologist!
:52:36
Do me a favor.
:52:37
Conclusion, bilateral aspiration pneumonia.
:52:40
-Do me a favor and take a look at these.
-What's the story in this case?
:52:44
A 35-year-old white man, acute onset
of aphasia, no history of trauma.
:52:49
What are you looking for?
:52:51
It looks to me like the architecture is
somewhat abnormal.
:52:56
Somewhat?
:52:59
This guy is a fucking gorilla!