Blood pressure after stroke: what to track and why

Uncontrolled blood pressure raises the risk of another stroke. Learn what numbers matter, how often to measure, and what to tell your care team.

PreventionMay 6, 20265 min readHealStroke Team

High blood pressure is one of the leading modifiable risk factors for a first stroke and for recurrence. After a stroke, clinicians often tighten targets and adjust medications — but the day-to-day work of measuring and logging usually falls to survivors and families at home.

What your team may ask you to track

  • Morning and evening readings, taken at the same times when possible.
  • Systolic and diastolic values (top and bottom numbers), not just “high” or “low.”
  • Heart rate if your monitor provides it.
  • Medication doses taken that day, especially new or changed prescriptions.
  • Symptoms such as dizziness, headache, or vision changes — with the time they occurred.

Tips for more reliable readings

Sit quietly for five minutes with feet flat and the cuff at heart level. Avoid caffeine and exercise for 30 minutes beforehand if you can. Use the same arm each time unless your clinician specified otherwise.

One high reading is not always an emergency, but a pattern of highs — or a single very high reading with symptoms — warrants a call. Bring a week of logs to follow-up visits; patterns are more useful than a single number from the waiting room.

Lifestyle pieces that complement medication

Sodium reduction, regular movement as approved by therapy, sleep, and stress management all influence blood pressure. Changes should be coordinated with your care team, especially when multiple medications are involved.

Built into HealStroke

The Blood Pressure Coach module in HealStroke helps you measure, track, and understand trends in plain language — alongside your broader recovery plan. It is part of our prevention pillar: small daily habits that protect long-term brain health.

Recovery guidance, one app

HealStroke brings daily plans, guided therapy, and prevention coaches together for survivors and caregivers — coming soon to iOS and Android.

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Published May 6, 2026