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Medicine Hunter
Calming Sleep™
as seen on CNBC with Sue
Herera, is available in Wal-Mart stores across the nation. Click here to
watch Chris on
CNBC
Power Lunch,
discussing the amazing benefits of herbal supplements.
Calming Sleep™
is also available online at
Herbal Powers.

Maca
Tru™ and
Medicine Hunter
Maca
Stimulant™
Chris Kilham is widely known
for his sustainability work with maca and the native people of the Peruvian
Highlands, where maca is grown. His inspiring story was featured on the front
page of the Business section of the
New York Times
this past New Year's Day.
Maca has been a life-sustaining substance in the
Andes since 3800 B.C. It is legendary for delivering energy, mental clarity, and
enhancing libido.
Maca Stimulant™
and
Maca Tru™
are both available
online at Herbal Powers.
MacaTru™
is available offline
at Whole Foods Supermarkets,
and in Natural Retailers.
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Capsicum Annum
Chiles, The Hottest Health Promoters
By Chris Kilham
The chile plant is any of five domesticated species of Capsicum,
including Capsicum annum, C. frutescens, C. pubescens, C. chinense, and C.
baccatum. These species are descendant of over twenty wild species from
tropical and subtropical America, originally found in Bolivia, Mesoamerica and
Amazonia. Though we do not know exactly when chiles were first discovered,
approximately 10,000 years ago appears to be a pretty safe bet. Seeds found
south of Mexico City date native pepper use there around 7000 B.C. The use of
chiles caught on well, and they spread quickly along established trade routes
throughout Central and South America and the West Indies.
Today chiles grow in the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, much of South
America, most of the Caribbean, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Burma,
Malaysia, China, Korea, Turkey, the Middle East, many parts of Europe and
throughout Africa. In the United States, many varieties of chiles are cultivated
commercially. Among them, the jalapenos and cayenne strains are the most widely
grown.
Agents Of Heat
The substances that make chilis hot are a group of natural oleoresins called
capsaicinoids. These substances account for between 0.1% - 1% of the total
composition of a chile pepper. The primary compound in this group, capsaicin was
first discovered in 1876 in India by an Englishman named L.T. Thresh. The
burning sensation produced by the capsaicinoids is physiologically similar to
the sensation of burning caused by heat or fire. The capsaicinoids open cell
membranes in a manner which allows calcium ions to flood into cells. This
triggers a pain signal that is transmitted to the next cell. This same process
occurs when cells are exposed to excessive heat.
The Scoville Scale
In 1912, Wilbur Scoville, a chemist working for the Parke Davis
pharmaceutical company established a method for measuring the heat level chili
peppers. In his original test, Scoville blended ground chilis with a sugar-water
solution in increasingly diluted concentrations. A panel of testers then sipped
the various dilutions, until they reached the point at which the liquid no
longer produced a burning sensation. A number was then assigned to each chili
based on the extent to which it needed to be diluted before you could taste no
heat. Since then, the heat of chili peppers has been measured in multiples of
100 units, from the bell pepper at zero Scoville units to the incendiary
Habanero at 300,000 Scoville units. But even the hellish habanero has been
surpassed by even hotter peppers. The Mexican Red Savina variety of habanero has
been tested at 575,000 Scoville units. Another variety called the Francisca
Habanero is reputedly hotter than the Red Savina. Pure capsaicin tips the scales
at over 16,000,000 Scoville Heat Units.
Chiles For Health
While chiles are primarily employed for the zip they add to food, they are
also remarkable good for health. In traditional folk medicine, chiles have been
used to treat numerous disorders, from arthritis to asthma, colds to
constipation, hemorrhoids to high blood pressure, lethargy to lumbago,
tonsillitis to toothache. Chiles have been made into decoctions, compresses,
tinctures, ointments, and even vaginal boluses (ouch!). As researchers delve
into chiles and their heat components the capsaicinoids, their studies show that
many of the traditional folk uses of chiles as medicines can be understood by
modern scientific means.
Take chilis to heart – Chiles reduce platelet aggregation, the process by
which disk-shaped structures in the blood accumulate and clog vessels. If left
unchecked, this leads to atherosclerosis, hardening of the arteries. Chiles are
vasodilators. They open up blood vessels, thereby stimulating blood circulation
and warming the body. Chiles help to reduce oxidation of LDL cholesterol, a
primary risk factor in heart attack and stroke. Chiles also reduce
triglycerides, stored fats in blood cells.
Burn calories! –Eating chiles actually helps you to burn calories, and
shed pounds. Research conducted at Oxford Polytechnic Institute shows that
eating chiles increases thermogenesis, the body’s caloric burn rate. If you eat
chiles or chile sauce with a meal, your body will burn calories at an increased
rate of about 25%. This translates into maybe 45 calories more burned per 700
calorie meal. So splash the hot sauce onto your food, and burn the fat.
Cancer prevention - Capsaicin in chiles fights cancer by preventing
carcinogens from binding to DNA, where they trigger processes that cause lung
and other cancers. This does not mean that chiles are a cancer treatment, but it
does mean that eating chiles can help to reduce the risk of certain types of
cancer. As part of your dietary intake on a regular basis, chiles provide some
measure of cancer protection.
Headache? – Chiles provide relief for some types of headaches, especially
painful cluster headaches. It may be that in the instance of cluster headaches,
consumption of chiles wears out the mechanism by which pain is transmitted.
General pain –Chiles contain pain-alleviating salicylates, compounds
found abundantly in the natural aspirin-like willow bark (which contains salicin)
and wintergreen (which contains methylsalicylate). When you eat chiles, you also
get a release of natural endorphins, the brain’s own opiates. This also reduces
pain.
Open that stuffy nose - Chiles also help to open up clogged and congested
sinuses. If you have a cold or allergy accompanied by clogged sinuses, there’s
nothing quite like a steaming bowl of soup just loaded with fiery hot sauce to
blast open your airways. Your nose will run like a river for a while, but then
you’ll be able to breathe.
Sluggish digestion, constipation – Chiles stimulate gastric secretion,
which means that they get your digestive juices going. So if your digestion is
slow or weak, a good dash of hot sauce in your food will prove useful.
Additionally, chiles help to move sluggish bowels. If your bowels are clogged,
sprinkle a good amount of chile flakes (crushed red pepper), seeds and all, on
your food. The chile will act like a blasting cap, helping to eliminate backed
up waste. It may burn a bit, but you’ll have a good bowel movement.
Chiles and Foodborne Bacteria– Of the many health benefits offered by
chiles, one of the most significant is their capacity to prevent foodborne
bacterial disease. In a study published in the March 1998 volume of the
Quarterly Review of Biology, researchers tested a long list of spices against
thirty different harmful bacteria which can occur in foods. Chiles killed over
75% of the thirty germs in the study. The agent in chiles which appears to kill
bacteria is capsaicin. In another study, capsaicin was found to inhibit the rare
but sometimes fatal Vibrio vulnificus bacteria, which is found in raw shellfish.
Eating chiles is not only a tasty and feel-good experience, but defends your
body against nasty microbes as well.
Nature provides a staggering number of beneficial plants for our use and
enjoyment. Chiles, which spice the cuisines of many nations, also benefit health
in unexpected and wonderful ways.
Chris Kilham is the author of Tales From The Medicine Trail, and the upcoming
Psyche Delicacies: Coffee, Chocolate, Chiles, Kava and Cannabis, and Why They’re
Good For You, both published by Rodale.
He can be reached at
chris@medicinehunter.com
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