Jack was taken aback. A half hour earlier Shirley Mayrand had made him feel old. Now he was afraid David was about to do the same thing in terms of knowledge. Jack was acquainted with the science of medical genomics, but his knowledge was limited to identity markers used in forensics. He knew the relatively new field, spurred by the decipherment of the entire human genome, was racing ahead at an exponential rate.
"My guess would be that the MA stands for microarray which is a high-throughput technology generally used for gene expression."
"Is it now?" Jack questioned innocently. He was already over his head and was embarrassed to admit it, although what David was saying was now relating to what Henry had said about the "positive MEF2A" on the other Post-it note.
"You've got a funny expression, doctor. I mean, you do know what a microarray is, don't you?"
"Well, not exactly," Jack admitted.
"Then let me explain. Microarrays are a grid or checkerboard of minute spots of a mixture of varying but known DNA sequences usually affixed to the surface of a microscope slide. And we're talking about a lot of spots. I mean thousands, such that they can give information on the expression of thousands of genes at any given moment."
"Really!" Jack said and then wished he hadn't. He knew he was sounding stupid.
"But I doubt the test you are questioning about is a test for gene expression."
"No?" Jack voiced meekly.
"No, I don't think so. My guess is that the SNP stands for single nucleotide polymorphism, which I'm sure you know is a point mutation in the human genome. Also as you know, thousands of SNPs have now been mapped so exactly throughout the human genome that they can be linked to specific mutated genes that are passed from generation to generation. Those SNPs that are so linked are called markers. They're markers for the bad, mutated gene."
It was as if the proverbial lightbulb lit up in Jack's mind. He hadn't followed everything David was saying, but it didn't matter. With trembling fingers, he hastened to get out the page from Sobczyk's chart. When he did he pulled off the other wrinkled Post-it. He showed it to David. "Could this possibly be a result of an MASNP?"
David took the second Post-it and scratched his head. "Positive MEF2A," he read out loud. "Does that ring a bell? Hmmm." He looked away and tapped his baldpate with a knuckle. Then he looked back at the Post-it. "Yes! I remember MEF2A. If I'm not mistaken, it's a gene somehow associated with coronary arteries. I don't know exactly how it is related, but I recall that if someone gets the mutated form of the gene, then the individual has a high probability of getting coronary artery disease. So to answer your question, 'positive MEF2A' could be the result of an MASNP test, meaning the test determined the individual had the specific SNP that was a marker for the mutated MEF2A gene."
Jack suddenly reached out and grabbed David's hand and gave it a rapid, sincere shake. "Let's get together some time! And thanks! I believe you might have solved a mystery."
"What kind of mystery?" David asked, but Jack was already running for the door.
Having come into the lab through the emergency department, Jack used the same route on his way out. He guessed that there was another exit that might have been more convenient, but he didn't want to take the time to inquire. The Post-it quest, as he called it, had turned out to be more successful than he'd imagined. He now thought he had both a possible motive and a possible, although unprovable, method for the deaths that Laurie had been so clairvoyantly documenting. All that he needed was to find out where Laurie had come up with the "positive MEF2A" to see if there were other markers with other patients.
Jack burst through the double doors that separated the emergency department from its waiting room and partially collided with a man in a wheelchair who was being brought in for treatment. The man was wheezing, and his wheezing got worse with the fright of the near collision. Apologizing, Jack wished the man well and ran across the waiting room and out into the night. The rain had picked up, but he didn't care. If what he was thinking was correct, AmeriCare was even more shockingly amoral and venal than he had imagined. And he was even gladder that Laurie was being held in the PACU and not allowed out on the hospital floors.
Reaching First Avenue, Jack turned south. He squinted as he ran into the rain, and he could feel rivulets running down his face. He had a definite idea of where Laurie had come across the "positive MEF2A." He just had to find it as the clincher. He thought he'd give himself fifteen minutes in Laurie's office. If he was unsuccessful after fifteen minutes, he'd put it off until a later time and beat a retreat over to the Manhattan General. Even if Brunnhilde wouldn't let him back into the PACU, he'd be content to park himself outside the door.
Laurie woke up with a start. The fact that she had fallen asleep in the face of her anxiety scared her as much as the commotion that had awakened her. It was Jazz and Elizabeth, both of whom had breezed into the room, talking about another patient. Jazz came over to Laurie's right, while Elizabeth rounded the foot of the bed and ended up on Laurie's left.
With effort, Laurie straightened herself upright. While sleeping, she had sagged over to the point that her shoulder was resting against the bed's guardrail. She glared at both women in turn. She had a constant low-grade pain in her abdomen, and her mouth was bone-dry. Up in the PACU, she had been given ice chips, whereas in her current room, she'd been given nothing.
"My gosh!" Jazz said with surprise, looking down at Laurie. "If we'd known you'd fallen asleep, we could have saved ourselves some trouble."
"Did you talk with my doctor?" Laurie demanded.
"Let's say I talked with one of them," Jazz answered. Her brash smile reappeared as if she was enjoying teasing Laurie.
"What do you mean, one of my doctors?" Laurie questioned.
"I talked with Dr. José Cabreo," Jazz said. "He happens to be available, whereas your Dr. Riley is undoubtedly sleeping."
Laurie felt her pulse quicken. She also remembered Dr. José Cabreo's name from Roger's lists. In fact, she had read the man's credentialing record and had learned about his malpractice and addiction problems. There was no way she wanted anything to do with the anesthesiologist.
"He was very upset to hear you were acting up," Jazz continued. "He reminded me under no uncertain terms that the clotting study ordered for you must be done. He was also very disturbed about your threats to yank out your IV and climb out of your bed, drain and all."
"I don't care what Dr. Cabreo thinks," Laurie snapped. "You said you were going to call my doctor. I want to talk with Dr. Laura Riley."
"Correction," Jazz said, holding up her index finger. "I said I would call the doctor, not your doctor. I should remind you that the anesthesia department still feels that they have responsibility for you to a large degree. You are technically in a postanesthesia state."
"I want my doctor!" Laurie growled through clenched teeth.
"She's a pistol, isn't she?" Jazz said to Elizabeth.
Elizabeth smiled and nodded.
Jazz looked back down at Laurie and said, "Since it's almost four A.M., you should be getting your wish in just a few more hours. Meanwhile, we intend to strictly follow Dr. Cabreo's orders that he has been nice enough to communicate to us for your own protection." Jazz nodded to Elizabeth.
Laurie started to reiterate her feelings about Dr. Cabreo, but before she could complete a sentence, Jazz and Elizabeth simultaneously lunged for her forearms, pinning them to the bed. Shocked by this sudden, unexpected assault, Laurie struggled to free herself, but a combination of her pain and the nurses' strength made it impossible. The next thing she knew, her wrists were secured in Velcro restraints, which were in turn affixed to the undercarriage of the bed. It had all happened so quickly, Laurie was dumbfounded.