my wrist is all yours to feel..........

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my wrist is all yours to feel..........
Using Wee Sight to demonstrate radial artery in a neonate
Using Wee Sight to demonstrate radial artery in a neonate
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Radial pulse
These food and forage legumes are chief among the plants used as “green manure” (see manure). The Fabaceae are equally important as fodder and forage plants clover, alfalfa, vetch, lupine, beggarweed, lespedeza, sainfoin, and soybeans are among the numerous valuable types. In many regions, especially where meat is scarce or expensive, legumes-notably peas, beans, lentils, peanuts, carob, and soybeans-are staples of the diet. Legumes provide valuable and nutritive foods because the food stored for the embryo in the seed (e.g., the pea) is rich in protein. The Pulses and Their UsesĮconomically, the family is second only to the grasses in importance. Many leguminous shrubs and trees inhabit desert and semiarid regions, usually forming the characteristic vegetation-e.g., the acacias of the S African bushveld and of Australia, and the mesquite of the American Southwest. Arboreal species occur in temperate and, frequently, in tropical zones, where epiphytic and climbing forms also thrive. The Fabaceae include herbs, shrubs, and trees distributed throughout the world in a great variety of forms. Typically, the flowers have 10 stamens, and the corolla and the calyx are formed of 5 petals and 5 sepals, respectively. The leaves are usually compound the fruit is a legume (a type of pod) and the blossoms may have an irregular butterflylike (papilionaceous) shape. Some botanists divide the Fabaceae into three or more separate families, but most species share certain common and easily recognizable features. Numbering about 650 genera and 17,000 species, the family is third largest, after the asters and the orchids. Pulse, in botany, common name for members of the Fabaceae (Leguminosae), a large plant family, called also the pea, or legume, family. Various diseases may be indicated by changes in the rate, rhythm, and force of the pulse. The normal rate is 70 to 90 pulsations per minute in adults, and 90 to 120 in children. It may also be determined at any other artery point near the surface of the body. Usually the pulse rate is determined by counting the pulsations per minute in the radial artery at the wrist. The rate of heartbeat is equivalent to the pulse rate. It takes about a quarter of a second for this wave to travel from the aorta to the arteries in the soles of the feet. The effect is that of a pressure wave initiated by the heartbeat and traveling from the aorta, the major artery leaving the heart, along the walls of all the other arteries. During diastole, or relaxation of the heart, blood volume in the arteries decreases and the walls contract, propelling the blood farther along the arterial pathway. Hence they become distended by increased blood volume during systole, or contraction of the heart. Pulse, alternate expansion and contraction of artery walls as heart action varies blood volume within the arteries.
Sometimes when we're watching a movie or sitting in a class, I'll find the radial pulse of my best friend, and he lets me just hold his wrist in that position for however long so I can feel his heartbeat. It is one of the most calming feelings.