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mellowsong
11-01-07, 12:22 PM
People who suffer from chronic headaches have been known to try all sorts of pills and home remedies. But cayenne peppers?
Behind the folk wisdom is capsaicin, the active ingredient in cayenne. It is said to bring relief by depleting Substance P, a neurotransmitter that helps transmit pain impulses. Sounds unlikely, but a number of studies have tested the claim, and most have found evidence to support it.
One prominent study was published in 1998 in The Clinical Journal of Pain by researchers in the department of anesthesia (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/diseasesconditionsandhealthtopics/anesthesiaandanesthetics/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier) and critical care at the University of Chicago. In it, the researchers analyzed data from 33 prior studies and found that capsaicin seemed to work better than placebos for headaches occurring in clusters.
But simply eating hot sauce isn’t going to help. Most studies suggest that capsaicin works just when applied topically. A study by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital recruited sufferers of chronic headaches and randomly split them. One group had small amounts of diluted capsaicin applied inside the nose for a week. The other received placebo. The study found “a significant decrease in headache severity in the capsaicin group,” but not the placebo group. Other studies, including one this year, published similar results.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Studies have found that capsaicin may help relieve headaches.
scitimes@nytimes.com

mellowsong
11-01-07, 12:24 PM
It's hard to imagine putting capsaicin up my nose considering what my skin does when exposed, I'm not quite willing to try, but sounds interesting and might work for people with tough skin/mucous membranes :)

Katee
11-01-07, 12:43 PM
I'd read a few years ago that they are trying this with migraines. They said it works, but some folks said the cure was worse than the disease! I've never been able to bring myself to try it.

Islander
11-01-07, 01:26 PM
I posted a similar article (yesteray?) on the direct application of capsaicin to wounds etc. Forget what category I put it under...General discussion?

mellowsong
11-01-07, 02:09 PM
I posted a similar article (yesteray?) on the direct application of capsaicin to wounds etc. Forget what category I put it under...General discussion?
Yes you did, under Pain....they used it in those operations under anesthesia. I think I would need anesthesia to put it in my nose, lol. I keep seeing more and more articles about what capsaicin might be good for. Seems like amazing stuff. A few months ago, there were posting in my kefir group about how capsaicin can STOP a heart attack. There was some pretty amazing info on that.

Katee
11-01-07, 04:11 PM
There's a new article at News Target about capsaicin for obesity:

Capsaicin from chili peppers may help prevent obesity, weight gain