As Foreman visits the homeless lady's area as drawn on a picture, one of the businesses is Kaplow's. One of the producers is named Lawrence Kaplow, and while he didn't write this episode, he still produced it.
A Jane Doe patient receives a "banana bag" containing intravenous fluids with vitamins and minerals. Usually, a "banana bag" is administered to correct nutritional deficiencies; the fluids are a distinctive yellow, hence the nickname.
The intern's patient gives Dr. House the history that a giant bird hit her on a Ferris wheel, a joking "tribute" to when male romance book cover model/actor Fabio was hit in the face on the rollercoaster Apollo's Chariot at Busch Gardens Williamsburg.
After the patient has a seizure due to severe hypoglycemia, Dr. Wilson orders D-50 IV, a solution of 50% saline and 50% dextrose, dextrose being a sugar molecule effective in normalizing blood glucose levels.
When House tells the two medical students he thinks he knows what condition the patient they interviewed has, one asks him what it is. House replies "That would be telling." This is a phrase that "The New Number Two" would tell Patrick McGoohan in the intro of each episode of the tv show The Prisoner(1967) in response to being asked "Whose side are you on?" In this episode House is wearing a turtleneck shirt as Patrick McGoohan often did in The Prisoner.