Usually, patients with hypertension do not always experience dizziness. Many patients with hypertension already have asymptomatic hypertension when they do not feel any symptoms of maladjustment, in addition to target organ damage combined with hypertension, so patients with hypertension do not always experience dizziness. If the patient’s blood pressure increases relatively significantly over a short period of time, or if there is significant target organ, e.g., cerebrovascular, dysfunction, the typical symptoms of dizziness will occur. For example, if the blood pressure increases rapidly within a short period of time and the result is a transient increase in intracranial pressure, typical symptoms of dizziness may occur. In severe cases of hypertension, dizziness is also evident when hypertensive encephalopathy develops. Otherwise, most cases of hypertension do not have vertigo or dizziness as a major clinical symptom.