apical pulse

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hi, i am a first semester nursing student and i am trying to do my first assignment. it asks us to define apical pulse, but i can't fine a definition any where and i don't know what it is. can any one help? thanks!

Specializes in Education, Acute, Med/Surg, Tele, etc.

Okay remember it this way...apical means the APEX or the top...if you are dealing with the heart...you don't want second best when you think apex..you want the heart itself! So listen with a steth for 1 minute...I will do more if I hear anything unsusual...but that my friend simply takes practice so can't help you there.

Ask your instructors if they know of any websites or media where you can hear different heart sounds, and in clinicals keep on asking to hear different types (older folks with CHF can give you some interesting heart sounds to learn from!). ALSO listen to a heart with a pacemaker or auto defib...they can have a distinct sound that will sound very odd if you don't know...also looks cool on EKG~! I found I had to take the initiative to hear them for myself by asking...so go for it :)

The apical pulse is the pulse heard at the apex of the heart (which is the pointed lower extremity of the heart) Yoou can hear the apical pulse by placing your stethescope at the 5th intercostal space (spaces between the ribs) on the left side just left of the sternum. Hope this helps :)

Specializes in Med/Surg, Ortho.

Try these,, might help

http://www.familypractice.com/heartlab/heartlab.htm

http://www.wilkes.med.ucla.edu/inex.htm

If i remember right we learned the Apex was just under the left breast, so it would be the bottom or point of the hear.

and the location of the apical pulse should be at or medial to the midclavicular line.

Specializes in Education, Acute, Med/Surg, Tele, etc.
The apical pulse is the pulse heard at the apex of the heart (which is the pointed lower extremity of the heart) Yoou can hear the apical pulse by placing your stethescope at the 5th intercostal space (spaces between the ribs) on the left side just left of the sternum. Hope this helps :)

Just an addition, finding this with larger breasted men or women can be an intesting endevor...you will learn how to by doing it :)!

OR doing it in a crowded noisy place...or when a patient won't be quiet...or when you have lots of wheezes or rales...or a screaming child..or if you are interested in ambulance ride alongs any time soon...LOL, "what does the apical heart sound like?" "oh...a diesel engine!"...LOL! Don't worry...you will get it...I practiced on myself and my loved ones...boy did that help! (I have PAC or Pre Atrial Contractions..short of it...my heart skips and beats to its own wierd rhythm when stressed...boy I was the MOST popular heart sound gal in school..LOL "hey Triage..can I hear your PAC's?" LOL!!!!!!).

Specializes in Utilization Management.
apical means the APEX or the top

Actually, apex means "tip" so the apex of the heart points downward.

http://www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/cardio1/anatomy.html

The apical pulse is also known as the PMI--Point of Maximal Impulse. Put your stethoscope under the left breast to hear it. All it means is "that part of the heart where the beat is the loudest."

http://user.gru.net/clawrence/vccl/chpt4/EXM05.gif

hi, i am a first semester nursing student and i am trying to do my first assignment. it asks us to define apical pulse, but i can't fine a definition any where and i don't know what it is. can any one help? thanks!

I am a second semester nursing student. Get yourself a GOOD medical terminology dictionary and use it. If I am reading/studying and don't understand a word I will look it up immediately.

thanks for all of you help!

I was always told to take an apical pulse if the radial was less than 60. Remember counting ribs down the sternum, now I just go there. Pacemakers were an ear opener, my fav. Tick Tock, just like a TIMEX...

Specializes in Education, Acute, Med/Surg, Tele, etc.

Good for you Fiona! Yes they sure are kinda fun aren't they...so is the first time you recognize a odd sound! AND..little hint..if you have a cardiologist at your disposal (yeah right)...ego stroke them and ask to hear something odd! They will SO teach you if you do it right! I just act like I am so utterly interested that my world would be so much brighter if I knew it! Works like a charm! :) Learned so much from so many 'don't you even talk to them' cardiologists just by being inquisitive and yet being student like! (but not too much! Don't ask alot of questions..let them give you info!~ They will..trust me!).

Apical pulse is auscultated at the PMI. PMI = Point of maximum impulse which is at the 5th intercostal space, midclavicular line.

http://rds.yahoo.com/S=2766679/K=heart+sounds+s3/v=2/SID=e/TID=F315_46/l=WS1/R=3/IPC=us/SHE=0/H=2/SIG=122tngid2/EXP=1105587210/*-http%3A//members.aol.com/kjbleu/heartsounds.html

good link to hear sounds.......

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