What are the Signs and Symptoms of High Blood Pressure?

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For most people, high blood pressure has no signs or symptoms. That is why it’s often called the “silent killer.”

AHA Recommendation: Measuring Your Blood Pressure

Measuring your blood pressure is the only way to find out if you have high blood pressure. An average based on two or more readings taken on two or more occasions by a health care professional is recommended for a proper diagnosis.

How Is High Blood Pressure Diagnosed?

To diagnose high blood pressure, also known as hypertension, you need to have your blood pressure checked in a health care setting.

How taking blood pressure works:

  • A reading is taken with a blood pressure cuff.
  • The cuff is placed around the upper arm before being inflated.
  • The inflated cuff squeezes the brachial artery and stops blood flow for a moment.
  • Air in the cuff is slowly released. If a manual device is being used, the person taking blood pressure listens with a stethoscope. If it’s an automated device, a digital display shows the blood pressure.

Watch an . You can hear what a health care professional hears as the blood moves through the brachial artery.

Your blood pressure reading is recorded as two numbers:

  • Systolic blood pressure (upper number) shows how much pressure your blood is pushing against your artery walls when the heart beats.
  • Diastolic blood pressure (lower number) shows how much pressure your blood is pushing against your artery walls while the heart is resting between beats.
BLOOD PRESSURE CATEGORY SYSTOLIC mm Hg (upper number) and/or DIASTOLIC mm Hg (lower number)
NORMAL LESS THAN 120 and LESS THAN 80
ELEVATED 120 – 129 and LESS THAN 80
HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE (HYPERTENSION) STAGE 1 130 – 139 or 80 – 89
HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE (HYPERTENSION) STAGE 2 140 OR HIGHER or 90 OR HIGHER
HYPERTENSIVE CRISIS (consult your doctor immediately) HIGHER THAN 180 and/or HIGHER THAN 120

Learn more about what your blood pressure numbers mean.

If you're diagnosed with high blood pressure

Your health care professional may recommend:

AHA Recommendation: Regular Blood Pressure Checks

If you are 20 or older and your blood pressure is normal (less than 120/80 mm Hg), you should have your blood pressure checked once a year during regular health care visits.

Home monitoring

When monitoring your blood pressure at home, a single high reading is not an immediate cause for alarm. If you get a reading that is higher than normal, take your blood pressure a second time. Write down the results of both measurements. Check with your health care professional to see if there’s a health concern or whether there may be problems with your monitor.

Hypertensive crisis

If your blood pressure readings are suddenly higher than 180/120, wait five minutes and test again. If your readings are still very high, contact your health care professional immediately. You could be having a hypertensive crisis

Get the high blood pressure fact sheet: English (PDF) | Spanish (PDF)

Video: 130 Is Too High For Blood Pressure