ESO Blood Pressure Management in Acute Ischaemic Stroke and Intracerebral Haemorrhage Guideline Summary - Guideline Central

Document Overview

Document Title
Blood Pressure Management in Acute Ischaemic Stroke and Intracerebral Haemorrhage
Authoring Society

European Stroke Organization

Document Publication Date
May 7, 2026
Page Last Reviewed/Updated
May 7, 2026
Document Type
Guideline
Country of Publication
European
Full Text Freely Available
Yes
Full Text Guideline
academic.oup.com/esj/article/11/5/aakag004/8671384
Source Citation
Sandset EC, Palaiodimou L, Jahr SH, Ho L, Fischer U, Katsanos AH, Krishnan K, Maïer B, Mistry EA, Sacco S, Schönenberger S, Steiner T, Tsivgoulis G. 2025 update to European Stroke Organisation (ESO) guideline on blood pressure management in acute ischaemic stroke and intracerebral haemorrhage. Eur Stroke J. 2026 May 6;11(5):aakag004. doi: 10.1093/esj/aakag004. PMID: 42095756.

Supplemental Implementation Resources


Document Scope, Criteria, and Use Cases

Document Objectives
Optimal blood pressure (BP) management in acute ischaemic stroke (AIS) and acute ICH remains uncertain. In light of new data published since the previous ESO guidelines, this update provides revised, evidence-based recommendations across 8 key clinical questions to support BP management in acute stroke. The guidelines were developed using the ESO standard operating procedure and Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology, including literature searches, systematic reviews and meta-analyses of relevant RCTs, assessment of evidence quality and formulation of specific recommendations. We advise against routine pre-hospital BP lowering in suspected stroke (moderate-certainty evidence). In AIS patients undergoing reperfusion therapy, we recommend maintaining BP < 185/110 mmHg before the bolus of intravenous thrombolysis and < 180/105 mmHg during and for 24 h after intravenous thrombolysis (low-certainty evidence) and/or mechanical thrombectomy (moderate-certainty evidence). We recommend against intensively lowering systolic BP < 140 mmHg in the first 24 h after successful mechanical thrombectomy (high-certainty evidence). Routine use of vasopressors to raise BP in AIS patients with neurological deterioration who are not treated with acute reperfusion therapies is discouraged (low-certainty evidence). In acute ICH, the net clinical benefit of intensive BP lowering remains uncertain; however, expert consensus supports early systolic BP reduction to < 140 mmHg in patients with small-to-moderate haematomas to limit haematoma expansion. Overall, the updated recommendations reaffirm the core principles of current clinical practice while providing more nuanced guidance for specific scenarios. However, the quality of evidence remains moderate to very low, limited by a lack of high-quality RCTs, methodological issues, inconsistent results and study heterogeneity. Consequently, most recommendations are weak and supported by expert consensus. These guidelines provide specific recommendations on BP thresholds and management strategies tailored to distinct acute stroke subgroups. They also highlight the ongoing uncertainty and emphasise the need for future RCTs to define optimal BP targets, timing, treatment strategies and ideal antihypertensive agents across different clinical contexts.
Scope
Management
Diseases/Conditions (MeSH)

D020521 - Stroke

D006470 - Hemorrhage

D020300 - Intracranial Hemorrhages

D000083242 - Ischemic Stroke

Keywords
Acute Ischemic Stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, stroke
Health Care Settings
Emergency Care, Hospital, Outpatient
Intended Users
Nurse, Nurse Practitioner, Physician, Physician Assistant
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