Why do people with high blood pressure have pain at the temples?

Pain at the temples in hypertensive patients is usually caused by increased intracranial pressure due to high blood pressure. The triad of headache, vomiting and optic papilledema occurs when intracranial pressure is increased, with pain at the temples as the main pain point, accompanied by dizziness and jet vomiting, usually from stomach contents, but the effect of common antiemetics is not obvious. If the patient has the above symptoms, it is recommended to go to the hospital for brain CT examination, intracranial pressure examination, and fundus examination to check whether it is caused by increased intracranial pressure. If it is the above situation, apply drugs such as mannitol for dehydration and treatment to lower intracranial pressure to relieve the above symptoms.