Vital Signs & Normal Values
Vital signs are the numbers behind your gut feeling. Pulse, respirations, blood pressure, skin, pupils, SpO₂, and mental status turn "this patient looks bad" into objective data you can measure, trend, and hand off. This guide gives you the normal ranges by age, how to take each vital well, and the traps that make good EMTs write down bad numbers.
1Why vitals matter
Everything else in your assessment is interpretation. Vital signs are objective data — two EMTs taking the same set on the same patient should get the same numbers. That's what makes them worth radioing ahead, writing on a triage tag, and defending on a run report.
But a single set of vitals is only a snapshot. A pulse of 104 could be a healthy adult who just climbed a hill — or the first hour of hemorrhagic shock. You can't tell from one reading. Take a baseline set early, then repeat: every 15 minutes for a stable patient, every 5 minutes for an unstable one, and after every intervention. Serial sets turn snapshots into a story: pulse climbing, pressure sliding, respirations creeping up — that's a patient compensating, and losing.
2Normal ranges by age
This is the table to memorize. The pattern helps: as patients get younger, pulse and respiratory rates go up. A resting heart rate of 140 is an emergency in a 40-year-old and a normal Tuesday for a 4-month-old.
| Age group | Pulse (beats/min) | Respirations (breaths/min) | Systolic BP (mmHg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult (18+ y) | 60–100 | 12–20 | 90–140 |
| Adolescent (12–18 y) | 60–100 | 12–20 | — |
| School-age (6–12 y) | 70–120 | 15–20 | — |
| Preschooler (3–6 y) | 80–140 | 20–25 | — |
| Toddler (1–3 y) | 90–150 | 20–30 | — |
| Infant (1 mo–1 y) | 100–160 | 25–50 | — |
| Neonate (0–1 mo) | 100–180 | 30–60 | — |
One pediatric fact matters more than any single row of that table: kids compensate, then crash. A child's cardiovascular system holds blood pressure near normal through vasoconstriction and tachycardia long after an adult would be visibly hypotensive — and then decompensates suddenly. Hypotension in a child is a late, ominous finding. If a pediatric blood pressure is low, that child is already deep into shock; don't wait for it to make the call.
3Pulse
The pulse is a pressure wave you can feel wherever an artery runs near the skin. Your workhorse sites:
- Radial — thumb side of the wrist. Default site for a conscious patient; feeling it also tells you the arm is perfusing.
- Carotid — side of the neck, in the groove beside the trachea. Use it on unresponsive patients; never press both sides at once.
- Brachial — inside of the upper arm. The pulse-check site for infants, whose necks are too short and wrists too small to palpate reliably.
Count for 30 seconds and double it (count a full 60 if the rhythm is irregular). You're recording three things:
At the EMT level, interpret rate in context. Tachycardia (adult pulse over 100) can be pain, fear, fever, or exertion — but it's also the body's first response to blood loss and shock, so a fast pulse that stays fast or keeps climbing deserves suspicion. Bradycardia (adult pulse under 60) can be normal in a fit athlete, but in a sick patient think hypoxia (especially in children, who go bradycardic when oxygen runs out), head injury, or cardiac problems. A slow pulse in a child is a pre-arrest sign until proven otherwise.
4Respirations
Respirations are the vital sign patients change just by knowing you're watching. The fix is a small deception: keep your fingers on the wrist after you finish the pulse and count breaths while the patient thinks you're still counting heartbeats. Watch or feel the chest rise; count for 30 seconds and double it.
As with pulse, record rate, rhythm, and quality — regular or irregular, and breathing that's easy and quiet versus labored, noisy, or shallow.
Adequate vs. inadequate breathing
A rate inside the normal range does not by itself mean breathing is adequate. Adequate breathing needs all three:
- Rate within the age-appropriate range;
- Tidal volume — full, even chest rise, not shallow sips of air;
- Effort — quiet and comfortable, not a workout.
A patient breathing 16 times a minute with barely visible chest rise is moving almost no air. Signs the work of breathing is failing: accessory muscle use (neck and shoulder muscles hauling the chest up), retractions (skin sucking in between the ribs, above the collarbones, or below the sternum — especially visible in kids), tripoding (sitting upright, leaning on the hands, chin thrust forward), nasal flaring, and one- or two-word sentences. Inadequate breathing gets ventilated, not just monitored.
Two abnormal patterns worth recognizing by name: agonal respirations — slow, gasping, ineffective breaths in a dying patient; treat as respiratory arrest, not "breathing" — and Cheyne-Stokes respirations — breaths that cycle deeper and faster, then taper off into a pause, then start again, often associated with brain injury. At the EMT level, name the pattern, support ventilation as needed, and transport; diagnosing the cause isn't your job.
5Blood pressure, skin & pupils
Blood pressure
Two methods with the same cuff:
- Auscultation — cuff plus stethoscope over the brachial artery. Inflate, bleed pressure off slowly, note the pressure where beats appear (systolic) and where they disappear (diastolic). This is the standard method.
- Palpation — for scenes too loud for a stethoscope. Keep your fingers on the radial pulse, inflate until it vanishes, deflate until it returns: that pressure is the systolic. Palpation gives you systolic only — record it as, for example, 110/P.
Use a cuff that fits: it should cover about two-thirds of the upper arm. Too small reads falsely high; too large reads falsely low. And remember the pediatric warning from Section 2 — in small children, skin signs and mental status will tell you about perfusion long before the blood pressure does.
Skin: color, temperature, condition
Skin is a free, instant perfusion monitor — when the body is in trouble, it shunts blood away from the skin first.
Capillary refill: squeeze a nail bed, release, and count until color returns. Under 2 seconds is normal — most reliable in children under 6, where it's a standard perfusion check. In adults it's less dependable (cold, age, and smoking all slow it), so treat it as one data point, not a verdict.
Pupils
The finding you want is PERRL — Pupils Equal, Round, Reactive to Light. Shine a light in each eye and watch for brisk, equal constriction. Deviations worth knowing at the EMT level:
- Unequal pupils — in a patient with altered mental status, think brain injury or rising intracranial pressure. (A small slice of the population has harmlessly unequal pupils — ask, and trend it.)
- Pinpoint pupils — classic for opioid overdose.
- Dilated, sluggish, or fixed pupils — hypoxia, severe brain injury, cardiac arrest, or stimulant drugs.
6Pulse oximetry & the Glasgow Coma Scale
Pulse oximetry
The pulse oximeter reads the percentage of hemoglobin carrying oxygen. For most patients your goal is an SpO₂ of 94% or higher; titrate oxygen to reach it rather than reflexively cranking a non-rebreather on everyone. Treat the number as one vital sign among many — a comfortable patient at 93% and a gasping patient at 96% are not sorted by the oximeter.
Know when the machine lies. Anything that weakens the signal skews the reading: poor perfusion and shock, cold fingers, nail polish, bright ambient light, and patient movement.
Glasgow Coma Scale
The GCS turns mental status into a number you can trend and hand off. Score the patient's best response in each category and add the three: the range is 3 (deep coma) to 15 (fully alert).
| Score | Eye opening | Verbal response | Motor response |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | — | — | Obeys commands |
| 5 | — | Oriented | Localizes pain |
| 4 | Spontaneous | Confused | Withdraws from pain |
| 3 | To voice | Inappropriate words | Abnormal flexion (decorticate) |
| 2 | To pain | Incomprehensible sounds | Abnormal extension (decerebrate) |
| 1 | None | None | None |
Report the components, not just the total — "GCS 12: E3, V4, M5" tells the hospital far more than "GCS 12." And as with every vital in this guide, a falling GCS matters more than any single score.
7Self-check
Answer before you expand. If you miss one, re-read that section — then go drill it for real.