Spicy food linked to longevity

chili peppers

Capsaicin, the active ingredient in chili peppers, may be associated with longevity, a new study finds.

Jesse Varner/Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Spicy food in the diet seems to contribute to longevity, a study of thousands of people in a Chinese registry finds.

Men who ate spicy food at least once a week were 10 percent less likely to die during the seven-year study period than were those with a more bland diet. Women had a reduced mortality rate of 12 to 22 percent during the study period with regular spicy food consumption, which varied by dose. Eating spicy food three or more times a week was associated with the biggest decrease.

These observational data don’t establish that spicy foods reduce mortality. But the findings suggest that men who ate spicy food three or more times a week had fewer fatal respiratory diseases. For women, the strongest associations were seen in respiratory and cardiac diseases and in infections.

Capsaicin, the active ingredient in chili peppers, might underlie the benefits, the scientists speculate in the Aug. 8 BMJ

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