Hypertensive encephalopathy is an acute disorder characterized by severe hypertension, headache, vomiting, altered mental status, visual changes, and seizures. Syndromes of hypertensive encephalopathy are usually reversible if quickly diagnosed and treated. The most common finding of hypertensive encephalopathy is bilateral edema in the supratentorial white matter, especially in the parieto-occipital area. However, atypical feature of hypertensive encephalopathy involving the frontal lobes, brainstem, cerebellum, cortical watershed zones, and basal ganglia has been sporadically reported. Brainstem and/or cerebellar lesions may be presented as the only abnormalities in unusual cases (1). Here we report three cases of hypertensive encephalopathy involving brainstem showing characteristic alternating linear bright and low signals in the pons on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), although many brainstem lesions showed no peripheral sparing compared to those of osmotic demyelination (2). This retrospective study has been approved by our Institutional Review Board. The requirement for obtaining informed consent from patients was waived.