Pain Management Health Center

This article is from the WebMD News Archive

Font Size
A
A
A

Hot Chili Peppers May Relieve Pain

Animal Study Shows Pain Relief Benefits From Anesthetic Using Chili Pepper Ingredient
By Jennifer Warner
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Oct. 3, 2007 -- A new hot-chili-pepper-based anesthetic may offer better pain relief during childbirth, surgery, or other painful situations than conventional anesthetics.

Preliminary tests of the anesthetic in rats show it effectively blocked pain without causing complete loss of movement in the targeted areas.

Researchers say the experimental anesthetic works by selectively blocking pain-sensing nerve cells without disrupting other nerve cells that control movement or nonpainful sensations. If the results are confirmed in humans, the method could be used in procedures ranging from knee surgery to tooth extractions.

"Eventually this method could completely transform surgical and post-surgical analgesia, allowing patients to remain fully alert without experiencing pain or paralysis," says researcher Clifford Woolf of Massachusetts General Hospital in a news release. "In fact, the possibilities seem endless. I could even imagine using this method to treat itch, as itch-sensitive neurons fall into the same group as pain-sensing ones."

Researchers say that although current anesthetics are highly effective, they also come with significant side effects, such as unconsciousness in the case of general anesthetics and temporary loss of sensation or paralysis in local anesthetics.

Hot Pepper Kills Pain

In the study, published in Nature, researchers combined a derivative of the common anesthetic lidocaine with capsaicin, the ingredient that makes chili peppers hot.

They injected the chemicals into the paws of rats and measured their ability to sense pain from a heat source. The animals were able to tolerate much more heat than usual.

Then, they tried injecting the anesthetic near the sciatic nerve of the rats and pricked their paws with nylon probes. The animals seemed to ignore the painful prick, but continued to move normally and responded to other stimuli.

Aside from use in surgical procedures or childbirth, researchers say the experimental drug may also eventually lead to more effective chronic pain treatments.

chronic pain/back pain newsletter

Let WebMD help you manage your pain while managing your life. Sign up today to receive WebMD's trusted Chronic Pain newsletter.

Advertise on Fox News Channel, FOXNews.com and FOX News Radio Jobs at FOX News Channel. Internships at FOX News Channel (now accepting Fall interns).
Terms of use. Privacy Statement. For FOXNews.com comments write to foxnewsonline@foxnews.com; For FOX News Channel comments write to comments@foxnews.com
© Associated Press. All rights reserved.
SMARTMONEY ® © 2006 SmartMoney. SmartMoney is a joint publishing venture of Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and Hearst SM Partnership. All Rights Reserved.
All quotes delayed by 20 minutes. Delayed quotes provided by ComStock.
Historical prices and fundamental data provided by Hemscott, Inc.
Mutual fund data provided by Lipper. Mutual Fund NAVs are as of previous day's close.
Earnings estimates provided by Zacks Investment Research.
Upgrades and downgrades provided by Briefing.com.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. © 2006 FOX News Network, LLC. All rights reserved. All market data delayed 20 minutes.
About WebMD|Terms of Use|Privacy Policy|Sponsor Policy|Site Map|Link to Us|Careers|