Pulse Rate
The leg has several pulses. The pulse in the groin fold is the femoral artery. The pulse felt behind the knee is the popliteal pulse. The pulses in the feet are the dorsalis pedis and the posterior tibial pulse.
They are not in time with each other due to their relative positions from the heart. The carotid being closer to the heart will be felt before the radial, although the difference is minute.
An aneurysm is a throb felt in the arterial wall.
Because their militia was so fast that when someone needed their help it felt like they got their in a minute.
Those are called pulse points, the contracting of the beating heart is what is being felt. It is called tactile arterial palpation and it can be felt any place that an artery can be compressed against a bone; at the wrist (radial artery) on the inside of the elbow (brachial artery), groin (femoral artery) in the neck (carotid artery) and pedal pulses in the top of the foot. The rate of the pulse is observed and measured by tactile (touching the pulse point) or visual means (observing the twitch that can be seen on the outside of an artery) and is recorded as BPM (beats per minute) or called the pulse.
A felt marker is simply called a marker or felt marker.
The pulse rate is the number of times you can feel the heart beat.99You are descibing the pulse, or heart rate.
There are various pulse points on the human body where a pulse can be felt. The most common pulse points are on the wrist (radial artery), neck (carotid artery), and groin (femoral artery). Additionally, pulses can also be felt on the temples, top of the foot, behind the knee, and on the chest.
As a very distal location, there are not many palpable pulses in foot. Thou the posterior fibular artery (which passes in the medial posterior part of your anckle) might be felt in cases of high heartbeat frequency
60 minute building paper is used to build..
felt
it is called quickening