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This is located in our rist + our neck! 20 pulse points total not counting the feeling the heart beat through the chest External Maxillary(2) Superficial Temporal (2) Brachial (4) Ulnar (2) Radial (2) Femoral (2) Popliteal (2) Posterior Tibial(2) Dorsalis Pedis (2) *Edit from original Answer Carotid Temporal These were left out. also sub-clavicular Carotid is separated into anterior carotid and posterior carotid
Temporal, Radial, Dorsalis Pedis, Anterior Tibial, Apical pulse, Ulnar pulse, brachial pulse, Carotid pulse, Femoral pulse, Popliteal pulse, Posterior Tibialis pulse Those are the ones I can think of but there are more.
The pulse can be located in various places on the body, including the wrist (radial pulse), neck (carotid pulse), inner elbow (brachial pulse), groin (femoral pulse), behind the knee (popliteal pulse), on top of the foot (dorsalis pedis pulse), and behind the ear (posterior auricular pulse).
You can typically find the 11 main pulses (dried peas, beans, lentils, chickpeas, etc.) in grocery stores, health food stores, or markets that sell dried goods. They are also available online through various retailers.
The deep veins that drain the forearm are the radial veins and ulnar veins. These veins run alongside the radial and ulnar arteries respectively, and eventually join to form the brachial veins. The brachial veins then merge to form the axillary vein, which continues the drainage pathway.
femoral, carotid, brachial, radial...
Carotid pulse.
Dosalis Pedis, Posterior Tibial, Popliteal, Femoral, Carotid, brachial and radial arteries.
There are many more than 5 pulse points on the human body. However, we can start with these: # Carotid -- side of the neck # Radial -- the wrist # Femoral -- near the groin # Pedal -- on the foot # Brachial -- at the inside of the elbow or under the shoulder.
Radial,Temporal,Carotid,Femoral,Popliteal,Dorsalis pedis.
Yes, the pulse rate is generally the same across different arterial sites, including the radial, brachial, carotid, femoral, popliteal, posterior tibial, and dorsalis pedis arteries. This consistency occurs because they all reflect the same underlying heart rate. However, the strength and quality of the pulse may vary at different sites due to factors like blood flow and vessel condition.
Pulses can also be found on the femoral artery (in the groin) and post tibial (behind the ankle) and on the top of the foot between the great and second toes.
The 10 pulse points or pressure points:: 1. The external maxillary 2. The superficial temporal 3. The carotid 4. The brachial 5. The ulnar 6. The radial 7. The femoral 8. The popliteal 9. The posterior tibial 10. The dorsalis pedis Most commonly used is #6. But EMT's will use #3 in an emergency.
there are 9 arteries in the human body 1. coronary 2. aorta 3. pulmonary 4. carotid 5. femoral 6. brachial 7. radial 8. dorsalis pedis 9. arteriole
This is located in our rist + our neck! 20 pulse points total not counting the feeling the heart beat through the chest External Maxillary(2) Superficial Temporal (2) Brachial (4) Ulnar (2) Radial (2) Femoral (2) Popliteal (2) Posterior Tibial(2) Dorsalis Pedis (2) *Edit from original Answer Carotid Temporal These were left out. also sub-clavicular Carotid is separated into anterior carotid and posterior carotid
The largest one - femoral, but it all depends on the wound, other injuries, blood pressure, position of the patient....
Temporal, Radial, Dorsalis Pedis, Anterior Tibial, Apical pulse, Ulnar pulse, brachial pulse, Carotid pulse, Femoral pulse, Popliteal pulse, Posterior Tibialis pulse Those are the ones I can think of but there are more.