THE compound that makes spicy food hot and generates the heat in muscle strain remedies could be the key to a new generation of cancer drugs which kill tumours with no side effects, a leading scientist said yesterday.
Capsaicin, the active component of chillies, has produced "startling" results in tests to kill a variety of tumour cells including pancreatic cancer, one of the most difficult versions of the disease to treat.
Dr Timothy Bates, who led the research at Nottingham University, said his team have discovered a potential Achilles heel for all cancers because capsaicin targets the "powerhouse" or energy source of tumour cells.
The discovery could lead to the production of drugs to cure a variety of cancers at a fraction of the €611m cost of developing conventional medicines because capsaicin is already consumed daily by millions of people.
Capsaicin is commonly used as an active ingredient in muscle rub creams.
Dr Bates said: "This is incredibly exciting and may explain why people living in countries like Mexico and India, who traditionally eat a diet which is very spicy, tend to have lower incidences of many cancers that are prevalent in the western world . . . we appear to have discovered a fundamental weakness with all cancer cells.
So, we are really doing mugs a favor when we paint them orange?
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