MEM-EM: The Memorising Emergency Medicine Podcast
Clinical Epidemiology and Bedside Identification of Sepsis Sources in the United Kingdom: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Expanded LUCAS Framework and NHS Presentation Trends The clinical management of sepsis within the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS) has undergone a paradigmatic shift over the last decade, transitioning from a reactive physiological response model to a proactive, source-centric diagnostic strategy. Sepsis is defined as life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection, and it remains a primary driver of morbidity and mortality across all levels of secondary care.[1] Within the high-pressure environment of the Emergency Department (ED), the ability to rapidly identify the infectious focus is as critical as the initiation of early fluid resuscitation and antimicrobial therapy. The LUCAS mnemonic—traditionally Lungs, Urine, CNS, Abdomen, and Skin, but expanded here to include Spine, Septic joints, Septic emboli, and Endocarditis—serves as an essential cognitive aid for clinicians to systematically survey the most prevalent and high-risk anatomical origins of infection in a population increasingly characterized by frailty, multi-morbidity, and advanced age.[2, 3, 4]
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