. Normal refill time is less than 2 seconds.
Where you can refill and empty container depends on what you want to refill it with. It can be refilled with water from a tap, or with lotion from a refill bag bought from the store.
100
There is only one second in one second.
1000
There is no such unit as "macro second".
Capillary refill refers to how quickly the color returns to the external capillary bed following pressure that has been applied to an area. A brisk capillary refill means that the color returned to the capillary bed rather quickly.
Capillary refill is the process of blood returning to the body. The normal capillary refill in a sheep is less than 2 seconds.
Skin should be pink, warm, and have one- to two-second capillary refill. Conversely, tissue that is pale or blue, cool, with no refill or rapid refill may indicate a problem with blood flow.
A capillary time, or capilllary refill time is how long it takes for your capillaries to refill. The best way to test this squeeze the tip of your finger, then let go. Time how long it takes to go from white to normal color. So a 6 second capillary time is one in which this takes 6 seconds Normally it should happen fairly quickly In the medical world anything over 2 seconds is bad
3sec
Shock, hypothermia, peripheral vascular disease
you dont you replace the whole thing
Check for capillary refill. Less than two seconds is good.
shortness of breath low energy fatigue cyanosis poor capillary refill confusion
capillary refill is when you push on someone's fingernail. the nailbed should turn white and then turn pink again in 2 seconds once you take pressure off. this is a test to ensure that there is proper profusion in the extremities. when your hands are cold, the capillaries in your fingers and extremities are constricted. this could be for many reasons (eg: shock, cold environment, etc.) since the vessels are constricted it will take longer for them to refill when pressure is applied to the nail bed. capillary refill longer than 2 sec that means there is less than adequate profusion.
it can be done about any were on a child but on a adult on the finger nails
Strength of pulses is one clinical indicator of peripheral blood flow. Another is capillary refill time.