The sudden return of blood pressure or symptoms to normal after more than ten years of hypertension requires continued treatment. The sudden return of blood pressure to normal or the improvement or even disappearance of symptoms such as headache, chest tightness, palpitations (rapid heartbeat, often accompanied by panic) in patients with hypertension for more than ten years cannot be separated from correct and persistent lifestyle intervention and treatment with antihypertensive medication for hypertension. Lifestyle interventions and antihypertensive medications should not be stopped just because blood pressure returns to normal and symptoms disappear, because the treatment of hypertension is not only to lower blood pressure, but also to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and mortality in hypertensive patients. Blindly stopping treatment may have a significant negative impact on the body that has been under treatment for a long time, and may easily result in the re-emergence of elevated blood pressure or even the development of serious cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases. Therefore, patients with hypertension should undergo regular, individualized, long-term and progressive treatment under the guidance of a physician.