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  2. Normal Heart Rate for Elderly: What You Need to Know - AOL

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    To measure your heart rate manually, you must first locate your pulse. The easiest places to feel your pulse are: Your wrist: on the thumb’s side, just below the base of your hand

  3. Your resting heart rate can tell you a lot about your health ...

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    As its name suggests, your resting heart rate, or pulse, is the number of times your heart beats per minute when you’re at rest. (Not to be confused with blood pressure , the force with which ...

  4. Normal Heart Rate for Elderly: What You Need to Know - AOL

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  5. Heart rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_rate

    Heart rate is measured by finding the pulse of the heart. This pulse rate can be found at any point on the body where the artery's pulsation is transmitted to the surface by pressuring it with the index and middle fingers; often it is compressed against an underlying structure like bone. The thumb should not be used for measuring another person ...

  6. Vital signs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vital_signs

    The pulse may vary due to exercise, fitness level, disease, emotions, and medications. [11] The pulse also varies with age. A newborn can have a heart rate of 100–⁠160 bpm, an infant (0–⁠5 months old) a heart rate of 90–⁠150 bpm, and a toddler (6–⁠12 months old) a heart rate of 80–140 bpm. [12]

  7. Bradycardia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradycardia

    In clinical practice, elderly people over age 65 and young athletes of both sexes may have sinus bradycardia. [1] The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in 2011 that 15.2% of adult males and 6.9% of adult females had clinically defined bradycardia (a resting pulse rate below 60 BPM). [41]

  8. Pulse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulse

    In medicine, the pulse is the rhythmic throbbing of each artery in response to the cardiac cycle (heartbeat). [1] The pulse may be palpated in any place that allows an artery to be compressed near the surface of the body, such as at the neck (carotid artery), wrist (radial artery or ulnar artery), at the groin (femoral artery), behind the knee (popliteal artery), near the ankle joint ...

  9. Outline of cardiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_cardiology

    Pulses: carotid, dorsalis pedis, femoral, popliteal, posterior tibial, radial, temporal, ulnar. Heart rate; Pulse quality: pulsus paradoxus, pulsus parvus et tardus; Respiratory sounds for crackles (edema) and other lung pathologies that can affect the heart; Rheumatic diseases can have significant cardiac findings and is too lengthy to include ...