April 26, 2006

Hot and Spicy

I scanned the article about hot peppers being good antidote to cancer into Microsoft Word. I reporduce it here.

Capsaicin, the compound that gives hot chili peppers their zip, kills cancer cells in a test tube and slows the growth of pancreatic and prostate cancers in mice, two studies show.

A University of Pittsburgh Medical School team led by biochemist Sanjay K. Srivastava implanted pancreatic tumor cells from people into mice. The same day, some of the mice began receiving oral doses of capsaicin while the others got saline solution.

After 38 days, tumors in the capsaicin group were half the size of the tumors in the mice getting saline.

Although spicy, the capsaicin didn't cause any gastrointestinal problems, says Srivastava.

In a similar study, re-searchers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and the University of California, Los Angeles implanted human prostate-tumor tissue in mice. Some of the animals subsequently received capsaicin orally while researchers collected cells lining the wind-others didn't. After 4 weeks, the tumors in mice getting the capsaicin were only one-fourth the size of tumors in the other after several months of follow-up and, in mice, the scientists report in the March 15 Cancer Research.

The findings are provocative because this particular prostate cancer came from "quite an aggressive cell line," says study coauthor James O'Kelly, a pathologist.”But we're not advocating that people start eating a lot of hot peppers to treat their prostate cancer," he says.

Both teams of researchers became interested in capsaicin after Japanese researchers reported, 5 years ago that the compound killed leukemia cells in test tubes. Similar lab tests by Srivastava's group indicate that capsaicin induces suicide by tumor cells, while: O'Kelly and his colleagues found signs that the compound stifled cell proliferation in some tests and induced cell suicide in others.

I went out and bought some hot pepper tablets tonight.

Posted by The Vorlon at April 26, 2006 8:34 PM
Comments

I'm wondering if hot pepper tablets will have the same effect as hot peppers themselves. Don't know why, exactly, but something in my head about something (garlic, perhaps) that just isn't formulate or processed quite the same in tablet form as it is in the "natural" state...

Posted by: Chad Everett at April 27, 2006 6:15 AM

That point may well be valid, but in these tests they used capsaicin, the active ingredient in peppers in the mice's water.

Posted by: Ted at April 27, 2006 6:34 AM

So who needs to swallow more pills? That's no fun. You've got to "eat" the peppers with your meal. Now that's entertainment for the evening! I can speak from experience. Try: Kung Pao Chicken, or Coconut Chicken (on the extreme side), or even Szechwan Beef. I'd be happy to forward you our recipes. You'll feel like a fire breathing dragon when you get done eatting any of these.

Posted by: KATHY SWIFT at April 27, 2006 11:59 AM

I think I'll stick with my bland diet and the hot stuff bypassing my taste buds for now.

Posted by: Ted at April 27, 2006 12:55 PM