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By Maggie Koerth-Baker
The hottest thing about chili peppers isn’t the way they taste; it’s everything else they can do for you.
Human cells aren’t the happy-go-lucky little fellows we’d like to imagine. In fact, our cells commit suicide on a regular basis, via a process called apoptosis. Unlike the messy deaths that happen when a cell is injured or diseased, apoptosis is a peaceful passing, wherein an otherwise healthy cell reaches the end of its life span, then shuts down, shrinks, and is absorbed by its neighbors. But with certain types of cancer, the natural process of apoptosis doesn’t occur. Unwilling to go quietly into the great night, cancer cells rage on, refusing to die, continuing to multiply, and eventually forming tumors.
That’s where chili peppers come in. New studies have shown that capsaicin—the chemical compound that gives chili peppers their kick—may be the key to controlling cancer cells. During the past few years, research has indicated that capsaicin can induce apoptosis in cancers of the lungs, pancreas, and prostate. In the case of prostate cancer, researchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles found that capsaicin also slows the cancer’s ability to grow. This means chili-pepper treatments could be lifesavers for men who’ve survived one bout of cancer but are at risk of another.
Of course, that doesn’t mean that people should start feasting on pepper-only diets just yet. Right now, there’s little evidence that gorging on chilies will prevent healthy males from getting the disease. In fact, thus far, all research tests on capsaicin have been limited to Petri dishes and some very unlucky mice. That said, scientists remain optimistic about the pepper’s potential to help control the disease.
Any good sailor knows that barnacles are bad news. If enough of these water-dwelling pests clamp onto a boat’s hull, it becomes less hydrodynamic. In fact, barnacle build-ups can force ships to use as much as 30 percent more fuel. That’s why many seafarers choose to safeguard their vessels by coating them with anti-barnacle paint. The only problem is that these paints are generally filled with toxic chemicals and metals.
Fortunately, in the early 1990s, an American sailor named Ken Fischer came up with a better idea. While chowing down on a Tabasco-laced sandwich, Fischer realized that barnacles might not share his love for spicy food. His hunch was right. Before long, Fischer was making millions off his pepper-based repellant, Barnacle Ban.
Surprisingly, barnacles might not be the only sea creatures averse to chili peppers. The Kuna tribe of Panama reportedly still sails with strings of chilies tied to their boats. The peppers supposedly make the ships (and the Kuna themselves) less appetizing to sharks.
In addition to killing cancer and fending off barnacles, capsaicin has the ability to dull pain. When it hits the tongue, the spice activates pain receptors that fire up that burning sensation. But after a while, the same process depletes the body of Substance P, a chemical involved in the perception of pain. The message “ouch” stops getting through to your brain, and your discomfort fades.
Medical science has already turned this trick into over-the-counter creams for arthritis, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Someday, capsaicin could revolutionize anesthesiology. Have you noticed that after a trip to the dentist, you talk funny and can’t move parts of your face? That’s because traditional anesthesia temporarily deadens your senses to the extent that you lose control of those body parts. In October 2007, however, researchers at Harvard Medical School announced that they’d used capsaicin to numb rats without rendering them immobile. The researchers first injected rats with capsaicin and then with a local anesthetic. As the capsaicin flowed through the pain reception pathways, the anesthetic followed in its footsteps, deadening any discomfort while leaving the rats free to scurry about their cages.
In the future, this could mean better painkillers—ones that could make it possible for women in labor to be mobile after an epidural or allow dental patients to move their faces normally after getting a filling.
Although pepper fanatics are always itching for new ways to assault their taste buds, chilies aren’t actually addictive. Numerous scientific studies have shown that chili peppers don’t induce physical cravings, withdrawal, or loss of control—the classic signs of addiction. Yet, there is something about peppers that keeps people coming back for more.
Scientists think that when pain receptors come into contact with capsaicin, it triggers the body to release endorphins—chemicals that bind to the same receptors in the brain as opiates such as heroin and morphine. And while endorphin highs from peppers aren’t like the ones in Trainspotting, they can provide enough of a euphoric kick to keep people engaged in the actions that release them, such as jogging or bungee jumping. This observation may go a long way toward explaining why humans are the only mammals that keep eating chili peppers, even though the sensation burns. Scientists believe that the little high we get from the spice has helped us convince ourselves that we like the taste. The truth is that we do the same thing—for the same sort of pleasurable payout—with other bitter flavors such as coffee, tobacco, and beer.
This article originally appeared in the July-August 2008 issue of mental_floss magazine.
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they can also make your poo feel like its on fire lol
posted by jodie on 2-5-2010 at 4:54 pm
As I can attest to, yesterday…
posted by mrs.arno on 2-5-2010 at 6:04 pm
That would be taco bell you’re thinking of jodie.
posted by David on 2-5-2010 at 6:14 pm
which is why my family grades heat as follows: warm, hot, and “put the toilet paper in the freezer.”
posted by mri on 2-5-2010 at 6:19 pm
Thought I knew it all about chilies, great
info on cancer cells. About man being the only animal that eats chilies. It only stands to reason that its heat is a defense mechanism against being eaten. Man has always used plants unique properties to its’ advantage, despite adverse affects, in fact because of them (digitalis, willow bark, hemp and belladonna to name a few). Interesting that parrots also like chillies,most likely for the same reason, given their intelligence.
posted by Theo Caris on 2-5-2010 at 6:38 pm
It’s also been proven that eating chilli dilates veins. It efficiently cools the body’s temperature and that is why it is eaten in vast quanities in hot climates.
posted by Lydia on 2-5-2010 at 8:08 pm
To bad I’m allergic.
posted by this is not my name on 2-5-2010 at 11:18 pm
It does appear that what they’ve got, you’ve got to get it, put it in you.
posted by Joe Maz on 2-6-2010 at 12:20 am
Joe Maz – hysterical!
posted by flea on 2-6-2010 at 1:03 am
Well, as I used to say in New Mexico, (I live in Denmark now, where ‘hot’ food is hard to find), “If it don’t burn twice, it ain’t really hot”, and “if it don’t make you sweat, it ain’t hot enough yet”….
Just my dos centavos….
:)
posted by Bobsen on 2-6-2010 at 3:09 am
They can also make good music. *rim shot*
I had to….
posted by Barbara on 2-6-2010 at 4:56 am
@Joe Maz — I just woke up the neighbors because I was laughing so loudly.
posted by Pat on 2-6-2010 at 5:04 am
Someone who used to work with my mom told her that her father worked construction all his life. In the cold weather months he would put crushed red peppers in his socks to keep his feet warm all day. After telling my ex-husband this story, he decided to try it. After about four hours his feet were suddenly burning, and they continued to do so for a few days. I guess he over-did the dose! It sounds like it would work if you did it right, though.
posted by Joscel on 2-6-2010 at 6:42 am
hahahhahahahaha that is hilarious
‘which is why my family grades heat as follows: warm, hot, and “put the toilet paper in the freezer.â€
posted by mri on 2-5-2010 at 6:19 pm
posted by Jeremiah on 2-6-2010 at 12:41 pm
I don’t know if man is the only one who eats chilies, in Texas, Mockingbirds will ravage your crop if you let them.
posted by mehmeh on 2-7-2010 at 8:18 am
Is there anything to the pattern of warm climate areas (i.e. India, Mexico) eating more spicy foods?
posted by Anita on 2-7-2010 at 2:42 pm
@mehmeh:
You’re right. But chilies don’t taste bad to birds, who don’t sense spiciness at all. That’s why some people put it in birdseed- squirrels hate it, but birds don’t care.
posted by Tdl on 2-7-2010 at 3:27 pm
@mehmeh–the article states that humans are the only mammals who indulge in chiles. birds aren’t mammals, so parrots and mockingbirds are excluded.
posted by RIchard Y on 2-7-2010 at 10:59 pm
Anita asks “Is there anything to the pattern of warm climate areas (i.e. India, Mexico) eating more spicy foods?”
Yes. Not only do chile peppers grow better in warm climates, but the origin of adding spices to foods comes from the need to cover up the taste of spoilage due to a lack of refrigeration.
posted by wboenig on 2-8-2010 at 12:55 pm
They are also used in Africa to keep elephants and other large herbivores out of the fields…elephants don’t like the taste, so we grind them up, mix a little water in, and spray it over the plants. Viola! Instant munchie repellant!
posted by Amy on 4-7-2010 at 6:22 am
on the toilet put an anvil on your lap. remain seated till wheel stop. hasta lumbago.
posted by dirk alan on 7-30-2010 at 10:25 pm
I disagree that humans are the only ones that eat chili peppers. I have a dog that eats peppers when I give her some. Granted she is kinda werid.
posted by John on 8-17-2010 at 8:51 am