Main Page | See live article | Alphabetical index

Pulse

See additional meanings of the word pulse at the end of this article.

In medicine, a person's pulse is the throbbing of a person's arteries as an effect of their heart beat, which can be felt at the wrist and other places. The term is also used to denote the frequency of the heart beat, usually measured in beats per minute. Pulses are manually palpated with two fingers, generally the pointer and middle finger. The thumb must not be used because it has its own pulse that will be felt instead of the patient's pulse. The two fingers must be placed near to an artery in order to feel the blood pulsating through the circulatory system.

The ease of palpability of a pulse is dictated by the patient's blood pressure. If his or her systolic blood pressure is below 90, the radial pulse will not be palpable. If his or her systolic blood pressure is below eighty, the brachial pulse will not be palpable. If his or her systolic blood pressure is below sixty, the carotid pulse will not be palpable. Since systolic blood pressure rarely drops that low, the lack of a carotid pulse indicates death. It is not unheard of, however, for patients with certain injuries, illnesses or other medical problems to be conscious and aware with no palpable pulse.

A normal pulse rate for a healthy adult, while resting, can range from sixty to ninety beats per minute (BPM). While asleep, this can drop to as low as forty BPM and during strenuous exercise, it can raise as high as 200-220 BPM. Generally, pulse rates go up as the patient gets younger. A resting heart rate for an infant is as high as an adult during strenuous exercise, and can be even higher.


In telecommunication, the term pulse has the following meanings:

  1. A rapid, transient change in the amplitude of a signal from a baseline value to a higher or lower value, followed by a rapid return to the baseline value.
  2. A rapid change in some characteristic of a signal, e.g., phase or frequency, from a baseline value to a higher or lower value, followed by a rapid return to the baseline value.
  3. In telephony pulse dialing is a way of dialing a telephone number using interrupted electrical pulses (see rotary dial).

Original source: from Federal Standard 1037C and from MIL-STD-188


In agriculture, a pulse is a leguminous plant, or its seeds, for example beans and peas.


In music, a pulse is an unbroken series of distinct yet identical periodically occuring beatss. This is opposed to a series of identical but aperiodically occuring beats, a series of periodically occuring yet otherwise differentiated beats, or an uninterrupted stream of sound (such as a drone). A pulse may be an unheard event underlining a piece, thus the tempo of the piece is how fast the pulse is running. In fact, given an ideal pulse, the most probable reaction for one to have is to perceptually group or differentiate the beats. A pulse which became to fast would become a drone, a pulse that is to slow becomes isolated sounds. A pulse that is regularly accented is a meter.