Where should you attempt to perform a pulse check in a child from one year of age to puberty? Where should you attempt to perform a pulse check in a child from one year of age to puberty?  mcq  given below:


Q. Where should you attempt to perform a pulse check in a child from one year of age to puberty?

(a) carotid or femoral artery
(b)Temporal artery
(c) ulnar artery
(d) brachial artery

 /

Next Question

Back

Do you Agree with Answer comment below

❤️ Pulse Check in a Child During CPR

Question: Where should you attempt to perform a pulse check in a child from 1 year of age to puberty?

Answer: (a) Carotid or Femoral Artery


📖 Who is Considered a Child in CPR?

According to BLS (Basic Life Support) guidelines:

  • Infant = Less than 1 year
  • Child = 1 year to puberty
  • Adult = After puberty

🩺 Where Should the Pulse Be Checked?

For a child aged 1 year to puberty, the pulse should be checked at the:

  • Carotid artery (neck)
  • Femoral artery (groin)

👉 These are the recommended pulse sites during CPR assessment.


📖 What are These Arteries?

Carotid artery = A major artery in the neck that supplies blood to the brain.

Femoral artery = A large artery in the groin that supplies blood to the lower limb.


❌ Why Other Options Are Wrong?

(b) Temporal artery
❌ Used mainly for temperature measurement, not for CPR pulse checks.

(c) Ulnar artery
❌ Not recommended for emergency pulse assessment during CPR.

(d) Brachial artery
❌ Used for infants (less than 1 year), not for children older than 1 year.


🧠 Memory Trick:
👶 Infant (<1 year)Brachial Pulse
🧒 Child (1 year–Puberty)Carotid or Femoral Pulse

📌 Disclaimer: For nursing exam preparation only. Current BLS guidelines recommend checking the carotid or femoral pulse in children (1 year to puberty) for no more than 10 seconds.

💚 Exam Objective Nursing – Asha D
Concept clarity • Easy recall • Nursing success
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top