1. carotid (neck)
2. brachial (inner arms)
3. radial (wrists)
4. apical (heart...need a stethoscope for this one!)
5. femoral (groin)
6. tibial (ankle)
7. dorsal (top of feet)
8. Popliteal (back of knee)
Do 5 minutes of stretchs to get the body going and then after check your pulse !
there is (1) temporal pulse, (2) facial pulse, (3) carotid pulse, (4) antebrachial pulse, (5) brachial pulse, (6) radial pulse, (7) apical pulse, (8) popliteal pulse and another one on the anterior portion of the feet.
The five upper limb pulse points are the radial pulse, found at the wrist on the thumb side; the ulnar pulse, located on the wrist on the pinky side; the brachial pulse, felt in the inner arm near the elbow; the axillary pulse, found in the armpit area; and the subclavian pulse, located just above the clavicle. These pulse points are key for assessing circulation and heart rate in the upper extremities.
It means that your heart is beating and you're alive and well. If you can't feel a pulse you will die in 10...9...8...7...6..5 oops you died.
You should check pulse for about a minute. For adults pulse should be anywhere from 60 to 80 a minute.
Pulse Polio vaccines are given to children of 1-5 age.
5 in blood
5 beats per min
1: Body Temperature 2: capillary refill time 3: mucous membrane colour 4: heart and pulse rate 5: respiration rate
Pulse The Desi Beat - 2007 1-5 was released on: USA: 17 November 2007
blood, organ, heart, liver, lungs
Do a pulse check about every 2 minutes (or after 5 cycles of CPR).