Whether elevated blood pressure due to alcohol consumption can recover on its own is mainly based on individualization. It can be divided into physiological blood pressure increase and pathological blood pressure increase.
1. Physiological elevation of blood pressure: If the patient is usually healthy, has no underlying disease, normal blood pressure, blood sugar, blood lipid, and has no long-term history of drinking and smoking, and the blood pressure rises transiently after drinking, and the magnitude of the rise is not large, the patient can be closely observed after stopping drinking, and the blood pressure can generally recover by itself.
2. Pathological elevation of blood pressure: If the patient has a long-term history of alcohol consumption, or is accompanied by high blood sugar, high blood fat and other risk factors of vascular sclerosis, and the blood pressure rises after drinking, and the magnitude of the rise is obvious, and the ordinary blood pressure is higher than the normal blood pressure, the high blood pressure at this time may be due to vascular pathology and other diseases, which has a certain pathological significance, and usually can not be recovered by itself.
It is recommended that the patient go to a regular hospital, complete the relevant examinations and follow the doctor’s instructions for treatment.