Why is the pulse always felt at the artery and not do vein ????
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Answer:
When the heart pushes blood into the aorta, the blood's impact on the elastic walls creates a pressure wave that continues along the arteries. This impact is the pulse. All arteries have a pulse, but it is most easily felt at points where the vessel approaches the surface of the body.
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- As the blood veins closest to the heart, arteries must deal with a great deal of physical pressure from the blood rushing through them.
- They have thicker walls and pulse with each heartbeat.
- All vertebrates' circulatory systems have veins and arteries as significant actors.
- Each pulse helps to oxygenate and eliminate waste from every cell by transporting blood throughout the body.
- Arteries transport oxygenated blood away from the heart, whereas veins return oxygen-depleted blood to it.
- "A for artery" and "away" (from the heart) is a simple mnemonic to remember.
- (Pulmonary vessels are an exception to this general norm.) The pulmonary veins return oxygenated blood from the lungs to the heart, whereas the pulmonary arteries transfer deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs.)
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