Neurogenic hypertension is a product of the sympathetic nervous system and is best treated with beta-blockers, alpha-blockers and drugs like clonidine. The top open access journals are peer reviewed scholarly journals of Hypertension: Open Access. The top open access journals are freely available on the public internet domain, allowing any end users to read, download, copy, distribute, prink, search or link to the full texts of the articles. These provide high quality, meticulously reviewed and rapid publication, to cater the insistent need of scientific community. neurogenic hypertension, the controversy of renal versus central origin, the clinical clues that suggest neurogenic hypertension, and the interventions best suited in its treatment. Neurogenic hypertension is most likely to occur in patients with labile or paroxysmal hypertension, but evidence of increased sympathetic tone also suggests a neurogenic component in hypertension in patients with severe or resistant hypertension, chronic renal disease, comorbidities associated with increased sympathetic tone, and ingestion of drugs that stimulate sympathetic tone. The importance of combined alpha- and beta-blockade in pharmacologic treatment and the status of renal denervation are discussed. Although there is much that is unclear in its pathophysiology, recognition of neurogenic hypertension is of considerable clinical importance in individualizing drug therapy and achieving blood pressure control.