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This Is Your Body On Spicy Foods

Dare to kick it up a notch?
Spicy red chili peppers for sale at the Central Market in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Southeast Asia.
Michael Marquand via Getty Images
Spicy red chili peppers for sale at the Central Market in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Southeast Asia.
Michael Marquand via Getty Images

While some of us avoid restaurant meal descriptions including words like cayenne, chili, and habanero, others jump on board. And new research suggests there might be a heart-healthy benefit to eating spicy foods.

A large study recently published in the journal PLOS One looked at the connection between hot red chili pepper consumption and mortality. Researchers from the University of Vermont surveyed a nationally representative sample of 16,179 U.S. adults over the course of 6 years, finding that those who ate hot peppers at least once a month had a 13 percent reduced risk of dying from heart disease or stroke.

The study was just observational, so it couldn’t prove a cause and effect relationship. In other words, there’s not enough evidence to say we should all immediately build a hot sauce habit like Hillary Clinton, who reportedly eats raw jalapeños like some people eat potato chips. But it does build on research that suggests spicy food does the body good.

Below are a few other ways the hot stuff can affect your health:

Spicy food may aid in weight loss.

Capsaicin, the compound that makes chili peppers so darn spicy, may contribute to the body’s ability to turn white fat into brown fat, according to a 2015 study in mice by researchers at the University of Wyoming. Brown fat is considered “smart fat” in that it helps the body burn calories more efficiently than white fat.

Of course, since the study was conducted in mice, it’s difficult to predict if the same reaction is replicated in humans. Still, the possibility is worth noting.

Men who eat spicy food might have higher testosterone levels.

Listen up, lads. Research recently published in the journal of Physiology and Behavior found that men who preferred to kick their food up a notch with hot sauce also had a higher levels of testosterone.

The researchers noted a man’s preference for capsaicin had already been linked to dominance behaviors, aggression and risk-taking, as The Huffington Post previously reported.