When checking pulses, assess rhythm, strength, contour, and symmetry.
The carotid pulse provides information about cardiac function, and is especially useful for detecting aortic insufficiency or stenosis.
To assess amplitude and contour, have the patient lie down, with the head of the bed elevated. Press medially to the SCM, at the level of the cricoid cartilage, using two fingers or thumb. Avoid pressing the carotid sinus, located at the level of the thyroid cartilage. Never press both carotid arteries at once.
Corrigan's waterhammer pulse: wide pulse pressure, best felt on radial or brachial arteries, exaggerated by raising arm.
deMusset's sign: a head bob with each heart beat
Traub's sign: pistol shot pulse, with systolic and diasolic sounds, heard over the femoral arteries
Duroziez's sign - systolic and diastolic bruit heard when the femoral artery is partially compressed
Mueller's sign - systolic pulsations of the uvula
Becker's sign - visible pulsations of the retinal arteries and pupils
Mayne's sign
Hill's sign
Rosenbach's sign - systolic pulsations of the liver
Gerhard's sign - systolic pulsations of the spleen
Quinkie's pulses: capillary pulsations in the fingertips or lips