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What Causes a Pulsating Feeling Under The Right Rib Cage? | Red Flags

A pulse under the right ribs is often gas, muscle twitching, or a normal artery beat, but new pain or faintness needs prompt care.

A pulsating feeling under the right rib cage can catch you off guard. It might feel like a tiny heartbeat, a rhythmic thump, or a tapping that comes in waves.

Many causes are ordinary: a normal artery beat you can feel, a muscle twitch, or gas pressing on the upper belly. Some causes call for faster care, especially when the sensation is new and pairs with pain, fever, fainting, or trouble breathing.

Why A Pulse Under The Right Ribs Can Happen

The right upper belly sits under the lower ribs and near the diaphragm. It’s also close to blood vessels that carry each heartbeat through the abdomen, plus ribs and muscles that move with every breath.

Pulse-like sensations usually come from one of these buckets: blood flow you can feel through tissue, a muscle spasm that repeats in a rhythm, or gut motion that bumps the underside of the ribs.

How To Check If It Matches Your Heartbeat

Wrist Pulse Check

Feel your wrist pulse. Then place a hand over the area under the right ribs and focus on the tapping. If both beats line up, the sensation is more likely tied to blood flow in an artery or vibration carried through the abdominal wall.

If the rib sensation doesn’t match your wrist pulse, muscle twitching or diaphragm spasms move up the list.

Why The Spot You Point To May Not Be The Source

People often point to “under the right rib cage,” yet the sensation may start closer to the center of the belly and seem to drift. Nerves can blur location, and the diaphragm can refer sensations to the rib edge.

Write down front vs side vs back, and what you were doing when it started. Those details help at a visit.

Pulsating Feeling Under The Right Rib Cage Causes With Lower Risk

These causes are common and usually settle. They still deserve attention if they stick around, keep getting worse, or come with new symptoms.

Normal Artery Beat You Can Notice

Each heartbeat sends a pressure wave through arteries in the abdomen. If you’re lying flat, just exercised, or have a leaner build, that movement can be easier to feel through the belly wall.

Muscle Twitching In The Rib Or Abdominal Wall

Muscles between the ribs and across the abdomen can twitch after heavy breathing, lifting, a new exercise, or a long day of slumped posture. A twitch can feel like a pulse even when it has nothing to do with your heartbeat.

Clues: the sensation is local, sometimes visible as a tiny jump under the skin, and it changes when you stretch or press on the area.

Gas And Bloating Pressing Upward

The upper intestine sits under the ribs. Gas can stretch the gut and create pressure, fluttering, or a thump that shifts when you roll over. If the feeling eases after passing gas or having a bowel movement, the gut is a strong suspect.

Diaphragm Spasms And Exercise Side Stitch

Rapid breathing, running soon after eating, or dehydration can trigger diaphragm spasms that feel rhythmic under the ribs. This can pair with a sharp stitch during activity, then settle once you slow down and breathe deeper.

Causes That Need Faster Attention

The risk level changes when the sensation is new, persistent, painful, or paired with whole-body symptoms. Age, smoking history, and known heart or vessel disease can also shift the risk.

Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm And Related Vessel Problems

An abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is an enlargement of the aorta in the abdomen. MedlinePlus lists a pulsating sensation in the abdomen as a possible finding.

AAA is not the usual reason someone feels a pulse under the right ribs, yet new, unexplained pulsation with belly or back pain, dizziness, or fainting needs urgent evaluation.

Gallbladder Attacks And Upper Right Abdominal Pain

Gallbladder trouble does not create a true “heartbeat” under the ribs. Still, many people describe the pain as pressure with waves.

NIDDK’s Symptoms & Causes of Gallstones describes upper right abdominal pain that can last hours and often follows heavy meals. Repeated episodes, fever, or yellowing of the skin or eyes call for same-day care.

Infection Or Inflammation Near The Right Upper Belly

Inflammation in the liver or bile ducts can cause tenderness under the right ribs with fever, nausea, or dark urine. Kidney infection can also cause wave-like pain that wraps from the side to the front.

When a pulse-like sensation shows up with fever, vomiting, or you feel sick overall, it’s a better move to get checked than to wait it out.

Possible Cause Common Clues Next Step
Normal artery beat Matches wrist pulse; noticed lying flat or after exercise Track triggers; seek care if new pain or weakness appears
Muscle twitching Doesn’t match pulse; local “jump”; changes with stretching Rest and stretch; book a visit if it lasts over 2 weeks
Gas and bloating Pressure or flutter; shifts with position; better after gas Smaller meals; seek care for severe pain or vomiting
Diaphragm spasm Triggered by running or fast breathing; eases with pacing Hydrate; seek care if pain is new and intense
Gallbladder attack Upper-right pain after fatty meals; nausea; may last hours Same-day evaluation if repeated or with fever/jaundice
Liver or bile duct inflammation Right-upper tenderness with fever, dark urine, pale stools Same-day evaluation
Kidney stone or infection Flank pain in waves; urinary burning or blood; fever in infection Same-day evaluation, sooner if fever is present
Lung infection or rib injury Pain worse with breathing or cough; fever or shortness of breath Urgent evaluation if breathing is hard or pain is severe
Abdominal aortic aneurysm Pulsation with belly/back pain, dizziness, fainting, or a tender mass Emergency evaluation for severe pain or collapse

Red Flag Signs That Change The Plan

If you feel a pulse under the ribs and any of the signs below show up, don’t tough it out at home:

  • Sudden, severe belly or back pain
  • Fainting, near-fainting, or new confusion
  • Shortness of breath or chest pain
  • Fever with worsening right-upper belly pain
  • Yellow skin or eyes, or dark urine with pale stools
  • Vomiting that won’t stop
  • Blood in urine, black stool, or bright red blood in stool

The NHS page on abdominal aortic aneurysm lists sudden severe tummy or back pain, breathing trouble, and loss of consciousness as emergency signs of a rupture.

What A Clinician May Do To Find The Cause

At a visit, the goal is to sort a harmless sensation from a condition that needs treatment. You’ll usually get questions about timing, meal links, exercise, and whether the feeling matches your heartbeat. A clinician may press on the abdomen and check for tenderness.

If right-upper symptoms point toward biliary disease, ultrasound is often the first imaging test. The ACR Appropriateness Criteria for Right Upper Quadrant Pain lays out imaging options when ultrasound is negative or the picture is unclear.

Test What It Checks Why It’s Used
Physical exam Rib tenderness, guarding, visible pulsation Helps separate rib pain from deeper abdominal sources
Abdominal ultrasound Gallstones, gallbladder swelling, bile duct dilation, AAA screening Common first test for upper abdominal symptoms
CT abdomen/pelvis Kidney stones, bowel issues, bleeding, aneurysm size Used when symptoms are severe or ultrasound is inconclusive
Blood tests Infection markers; liver and bile duct irritation Checks for inflammation, blockage, or systemic illness
Urinalysis Blood or infection in urine Helps confirm stone or infection patterns
ECG Heart rhythm clues Used when upper abdominal pain could be cardiac
Chest X-ray Pneumonia or pleural issues Used when cough, fever, or breathing pain is present
Follow-up plan Change over time Used when symptoms persist and tests don’t fit the story

What You Can Do While You Track A Mild Sensation

If you feel well and you have no red flags, track for a short window and look for clean triggers. Start with posture: does it show up only when lying on your back or right side? Gas and normal artery beats often change with position.

Next, watch meals. If the sensation follows heavy meals with nausea or right-upper pain, the gallbladder rises on the list. If it follows exercise or long sitting, muscles and the diaphragm deserve a closer look.

Low-risk steps for the next couple of days:

  • Eat smaller meals and slow down while eating.
  • Walk after meals to help gas move.
  • Hydrate, especially on workout days.
  • Use gentle heat on sore rib muscles.
  • Avoid heavy lifting that triggers the area.

If symptoms escalate, or the sensation starts waking you from sleep, book a medical visit sooner.

A Simple Tracking Log That Makes A Visit Easier

A short log can cut through guesswork. Use a notes app and keep it simple.

  • Timing: start date, time of day, episode length
  • Location: front, side, or back; a one-finger map helps
  • Rhythm: matches wrist pulse or not
  • Triggers: meals, exercise, twisting, caffeine, lying flat
  • Added symptoms: nausea, fever, bowel or urine changes, breathing issues
  • Relief: position change, walking, passing gas, heat, rest

Bring the log plus a current medicine list. That helps your clinician pick targeted tests, not a scattershot workup.

A pulse under the right ribs can be harmless, yet pattern matters. If it’s new and paired with severe pain, fainting, fever, yellowing, or breathing trouble, get urgent care. If it’s mild and comes and goes with clear triggers, track it for a short window and bring your notes to a visit if it keeps returning.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.