Eating spicy food could be key to longer life, says study

chilis

You could give death a ditch by eating spicy food, especially fresh chilli, according to a Chinese study, researchers said Tuesday.

Although the researchers cautioned that it was too early to draw a final conclusion on the potential benefits of spicy food. They said that further research was required for updated dietary recommendations.

The study, published in The BMJ journal, collected dietary data from nearly 490,000 people, aged 30 to 79, in China.

They were enrolled between 2004 and 2008, and their health monitored for an average of seven years. Just over 20,000 participants died in the period.

“Compared with participants who ate spicy foods less than once a week, those who consumed spicy foods one or two days a week were at a 10% reduced risk of death,” said a statement from The BMJ.

And those who ate spicy foods almost every day, “had a relative 14% lower risk of death compared to those who consumed spicy foods less than once a week.”

The association was similar in men and women, and stronger in those who did not consume alcohol.

Fresh and dried chilli peppers were the most commonly used spices — and the association was higher with the fresh variety, according to the team led by researchers at the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences.

The answer may be found in an ingredient of spices — capsaicin, which has previously been suggested to posses anti-obesity, anti-oxidant, anti-inflammation and anti-cancer properties.

“Maybe this is something in the way spices are used in Chinese cooking, or related to other things people eat or drink with the spicy food. Maybe it has something to do with the sort of people, in China, who tend to eat more spicy food.” The researchers suggested that further research on other populations would lead to conclusive results.

How Neo-Ren is this?

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