When you put your thumb over a vein sufficiently close to the surface of your skin, you should feel a gentle throbbing underneath your th8mb. The throbbing should be steady. This is your heartbeat. If you count between the beats you get your pulse rate.
The correct way to feel your pulse, is to put your fingertips on your wrist or throat.
If you are checking another person's pulse however, you should not use your thumb.
(the reason why you should not use your thumb is because it has its own artery, which will give you a false pulse reading)
You have a pulse in your thumb, so using your thumb to check your pulse is likely to get an errouneous result.
yes it does and that's why when you're trying to measure your pulse on your neck or wrist you always feel for the pulse there with your pointer finger and your midlle finger because if you were to do that with your thumb you would get an inaccurate answer because both your thumb and your neck/wrist have a pulse
The thumb because it has a pulse of it's own.
Your thumb also has a pulse so you could be counting your own pulse beats per minute.
I was taught in nursing school that both the thumb and index finger have a pulse, so that when taking someone else's pulse, use the middle and ring finger
You can actually feel your own heartbeat in your thumb. You wouldnt get a correct pulse if you feel your heartbeat on the patient
No, because your thumb carries your pulse which might be confused with the client's pulse.
No, because your thumb carries your pulse which might be confused with the client's pulse.
No.. the index finger does not have a pulse... for this reason, when feeling for a person's pulse, you use your middle finger and your index finger (you never use your thumb as it has a pulse)
The neck pulse is the corotid pulse; the wrist pulse is the radial pulse; the arm pulse is the brachial pulse. it seems that the pulses are named according to the artery palpated; therefore, your thumb pulse must be your princeps pollicis pulse. this is an educated guess.
The thumb has a pulse.
You should never take a manual pulse with your thumb because of the chance of picking up your own pulse from the blood vessels in your thumb.
Your thumb has its own pulse so it shouldn't be used to take your pulse.