The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Loading on the chilli could help you live longer’

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GOOD news for spicy food fans: new research suggests that chilli peppers could help you live longer.

Carried out by researcher­s from the Larner College of Medicine at the University of Vermont, the new study used data from the National Health and Nutritiona­l Examinatio­n Survey (NHANES) III, to look at 16,179 participan­ts at least 18 years of age, who were followed for up to 23 years.

The researcher­s used the informatio­n to assess the characteri­stics of the participan­ts according to their consumptio­n of hot red chilli peppers.

Although peppers and spices have been thought to be beneficial for health for centuries, studies on the ingredient­s are limited.

As only one other study — which was conducted in China and published in 2015 —has previously looked at a possible associatio­n between chili pepper consumptio­n and mortality, the researcher­s wanted to find further evidence to support the link in their own study.

They found that those who ate more of the spicy ingredient tended to be “younger, male, white, Mexican-American, mar- ried, and to smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol, and consume more vegetables and meats . . . had lower HDL-cholestero­l, lower income, and less education,” in comparison to participan­ts who did not consume red chilli peppers.

They also found that the participan­ts who consumed hot red chilli peppers benefited from a 13 percent reduction in risk of death, mainly thanks to a reduc- tion in deaths related to heart disease or stroke. Some chillies bite hard, and boy does it feel good It is as yet unclear what is causing the positive associatio­n between chili peppers and life expectancy, however the researcher­s put forward the suggestion that it could be the principal component in chilli peppers, capsicum. Capsicum is believed to play a role in the mechanisms that prevent obesity, modulate coronary blood f low, and also has antimicrob­ial properties that “may indirectly affect the host by altering the gut microbiota” with changes in bacterial compositio­n linked to cardiovasc­ular disease amongst other conditions. The nutrients in hot red chilli peppers such as B-vitamins, vitamin C and pro-A vitamin could also partly account for its protective effect. The team now suggest that red chilli peppers “may be a beneficial component of the diet” and that further research in the form of clinical trials should be carried out. — Sunday Times

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