"If you
master only one herb in your life, master cayenne
pepper. It is more powerful than any other." Dr.
Schulze
"In 35 years of practice, and working with the people and teaching, I have never on house calls lost one heart attack patient and the reason is, whenever I go in--if they are still breathing--I pour down them a cup of cayenne tea: a teaspoon of cayenne in a cup of hot water,
and within minutes they are up and around." Dr. Christopher
"In 35 years of practice, and working with the people and teaching, I have never on house calls lost one heart attack patient and the reason is, whenever I go in--if they are still breathing--I pour down them a cup of cayenne tea: a teaspoon of cayenne in a cup of hot water,
and within minutes they are up and around." Dr. Christopher
Cayenne Pepper
and Medicinal Qualities
Dr.
Patrick Quillin "Cayenne pepper - prized for
thousands of years for its healing power. Folklore from around the
world recounts amazing results using cayenne pepper in simple
healing and in baffling health problems. But cayenne pepper is not
just a healer from ancient history. Recent clinical studies have
been conducted on many of the old-time health applications for this
miracle herb. Again and again, the therapeutic value of cayenne
pepper has been medically validated."
Dyspepsia
Symptoms Reduced
In a recent
letter to the editors of the New England Journal of Medicine, three
Italian doctors describe how they were able to reduce patients'
reported dyspepsia symptoms by more than half - by prescribing red
pepper powder. In a study of 30 patients with functional dyspepsia,
half of the participants received a placebo, while the other half
took 2.5 grams of red pepper powder each day (divided into capsules
taken before each of three meals). Both groups took their
respective treatments for five weeks, and rated their symptoms each
day on a scale of zero to three (higher scores indicated more
severe symptoms). By the third week, the red pepper group showed a
significant advantage over the control group. And by week five, the
pepper group's symptoms had declined 60 percent from their baseline
scores - while the control group's scores had only decreased about
half as much. The symptom scores included ratings for pain, a
feeling of fullness, nausea, and an overall score. The red pepper
powder produced significant gains in all four areas.
Many herbalists
believe that Cayenne is the most useful and valuable herb in the
herb kingdom, not only for the entire digestive system, but also
for the heart and circulatory system. It acts as a catalyst and
increases the effectiveness of other herbs when used with them.
Cayenne is a
medicinal and nutritional herb. It is a very high source of
Vitamins A and C, has the complete B complexes, and is very rich in
organic calcium and potassium, which is one of the reasons it is
good for the heart.
Digestion
Cayenne can
rebuild the tissue in the stomach and the peristaltic action in the
intestines. It aids elimination and assimilation, and helps the
body to create hydrochloric acid, which is so necessary for good
digestion and assimilation, especially of proteins. All this
becomes very significant when we realize that the digestive system
plays the most important role in mental, emotional and physical
health, as it is through the digestive system that the brain,
glands, muscles and every other part of the body are fed.
Heart
Cayenne has been
known to stop heart attacks within 30 seconds. For example, when a
90-year-old man in Oregon had a severe heart attack, his daughter
was able to get Cayenne extract into his mouth. He was pronounced
dead by the medics, but within a few minutes, he regained
consciousness. On the way to the hospital, he remained in a
semi-conscious state, but the daughter kept giving him the Cayenne
extract. By the time they got to the hospital, he had fully
recovered and wanted to go home and mow the lawn. The doctor asked
what she had given him, as he said it was the closest thing to a
miracle he had ever seen.
Capsicum
(cayenne pepper) is said to be unequal for its ability to boost
circulation and increase heart action. Capsicum exerts a variety of
desirable actions on the entire cardiovascular system. It has the
extraordinary ability to enhance cardiovascular performance while
actually lowering blood pressure. Capsicum has an energizing effect
on the entire system. It has traditionally been used for overcoming
fatigue and restoring stamina and vigor. It is a natural stimulant
without the threatening side effects (palpitations, hyper-activity
or rise in blood pressure) of most other stimulating agents.
Because Capsicum
boots peripheral circulation and stimulates organ secretion, it
expedites the therapeutic delivery and action of nutrients in the
body. It will ensure the rapid and even distribution of the active
principles of available nutrients to critical function centers,
including those involved in cellular respiration, metabolic data
transmission and neural-hormonal action. The remarkable ability of
Capsicum to stimulate organ secretion and even heart action makes
it one of the strongest natural stimulants known. Clearly, Capsicum
should be considered nothing less than a wonder herb that has
scientifically proven its worth!
If you want to
carry something in your first aid kit for a heart attack, carry a
cayenne tincture. Even a bottle of Tabasco Sauce® might be good
enough. Dr Christopher discovered that a cup of cayenne tea, one
tsp of cayenne in a cup of hot water, stopped a heart attack in
under three minutes. If you feel one coming on, try a few
droppers-full of cayenne tincture and if that doesn't stop it, then
nitroglycerine wouldn't work either.
If a heart
attack should occur, it is suggested that a teaspoon of extract be
given every 15 minutes or a teaspoon of Cayenne in a glass of hot
water be taken until the crisis has passed. Dr. Anderson also knew
of a doctor who rushed out into the parking lot and put cayenne
tincture into the mouth of a man who had died of a heart attack
while he was parking his car. Within a few minutes, the mans heart
starting beating again. More
about cayenne and heart attacks
According to Dr.
Richard Anderson, using cayenne and hawthorn berries together has a
most incredible effect upon the heart. He believes that a regimen
of cayenne and hawthorn berries for several months will greatly
strengthen the heart, and possibly prevent heart attacks. He states
further that if an attack were to occur in someone who had followed
this regimen, chances are very good that no damage would occur.
Dr. Richard
Anderson tells this story about his mother
“I had her
taking hawthorn berries and cayenne when she had a heart attack at
the age of 79. Her diet had not been the best, and she was in
anextremely stressful situation. While in the hospital, they found
three blocked arteries and wanted to operate immediately. They did
not think that she could survive for more than a few weeks if they
didnt operate. (How many have heard that story!) The doctors
thought it would be very risky to operate, but they had her there,
and there was a lot of money to be made. So they decided to take
some tests in the hopes that they could find an excuse to operate.
In spite of the fact that she had been taking lots of aspirin for
her arthritis, smoked like she was the reincarnation of a boiler
factory, and had just had a heart attack, they found that her heart
was incredibly strong. In fact, they felt that her heart was
stronger than most people in their 30s! The good news was that not
only did she survive the operation, but also she stopped smoking!
Well worth the operation, dont you think? In my opinion, that was
the best thing the doctors ever did for her. Well, that is what
hawthorn and cayenne can do for the heart, and every good herbalist
knows it; every good doctor should also know it, but very few do.”
Have Cayenne
Extract available for Emergencies
It is a good
idea to always have some Cayenne extract on hand for emergencies.
Dr. Anderson carries capsules of cayenne with him in the car and
whenever he goes hiking, backpacking or mountain climbing. He says,
“You never know when you may find someone having a heart attack
or some other emergency.”
The
following stories demonstrate only a few of the remarkable
emergency uses of cayenne:
If a hemorrhage
occurs in the lungs, stomach, uterus or nose, it is suggested that
a teaspoon of extract (or a teaspoon of cayenne powder in a cup of
hot water) be given every 15 minutes until the crisis has passed.
The bleeding should stop in 10-30 seconds. The reason for this is
that rather than the blood pressure being centralized, it is
equalized by the Cayenne, and the clotting action of the blood
becomes more rapid. For external bleeding, take cayenne internally
and pour cayenne directly on the wound.
Dyspepsia
In a
double-blind study, 30 individuals with dyspepsia were given either
2.5 grams daily of red pepper powder (divided up and taken prior to
meals) or placebo for 5 weeks. By the third week of treatment,
individuals taking red pepper were experiencing significant
improvements in pain, bloating, and nausea as compared to placebo,
and these relative improvement lasted through the end of the study.
A
placebo-controlled crossover study failed to find benefit, but it
only enrolled 11 participants, far too few to have much chance of
identifying a treatment effect.
All double-blind
studies of topical capsaicin (or cayenne) suffer from one drawback:
it isn't really possible to hide the burning sensation that occurs
during initial use of the treatment. For this reason, such studies
probably aren't truly double-blind. It has been suggested that
instead of an inactive placebo, researchers should use some other
substance (such as camphor) that causes at least mild burning.
However, such treatments might also have therapeutic benefits; they
have a long history of use for pain as well.
Because of these
complications, the evidence for topical treatments cited below is
less meaningful than it might at first appear.
Pain Relief
Capsaicin cream
is well established as a modestly helpful pain-relieving treatment
for post-herpetic neuropathy (the pain that lingers after an attack
of shingles) peripheral neuropathy (nerve pain that occurs most
commonly as a side effect of diabetes, but may occur with HIV as
well as other conditions), nerve pain after cancer surgery and
arthritis.
Capsaicin
instilled into the nose may be helpful for cluster headache. (The
fact that this has even been considered a viable treatment option
shows how painful cluster headaches can be!) Actual cayenne rather
than capsaicin has been tested for pain as well. A 3-week,
double-blind trial of 154 individuals with back pain found that
cayenne applied topically as a plaster improved pain to a greater
extent than placebo.
Skin Conditions
A double-blind,
placebo-controlled trial of almost 200 individuals found that use
of topical capsaicin can improve itching as well as overall
severity of psoriasis. Benefits were also seen in a smaller
double-blind study of topical capsaicin for psoriasis. Topical
capsaicin is thought to be helpful for various itchy skin
conditions, such as prurigo nodularis, but double-blind studies are
lacking.
Cancer Research
Researchers
found capsaicin exhibited anticancer activity (it induced
programmed cell death to human cancer cells without affecting
normal cells) against pancreatic cancer, an aggressive form of the
disease typified by exceptionally poor outcomes."
Headache Relief
Chronic headache
sufferers may soon have some new alternatives. The active
ingredient in cayenne peppers, capsaicin, is believed to bring
headache relief by depleting Substance P, a neurotransmitter that
helps send pain signals.
Richard
Schulze - "If you take cayenne pepper in
capsules, you may be wasting your time and never getting the cures
I got with my patients."
Do you have a
question about Natural Health or need assistance? Contact
Shirley
Call 323-522-4521 or 323-989-3372
Call 323-522-4521 or 323-989-3372
Heart Attacks
Dr.
Christopher -
"In 35
years of practice, and working with the people and teaching, I have
never on house calls lost one heart attack patient and the reason
is, whenever I go in--if they are still breathing--I pour down them
a cup of cayenne tea (a teaspoon of cayenne in a cup of hot water,
and within minutes they are up and around). This is one of the
fastest acting aids we could ever give for the heart, because it
feeds that heart immediately. Most hearts are suffering from
malnutrition because of processed food we are eating, but here it
gets a good powerful dose of real food and it's something that has
brought people in time after time. This is something that
everyone should know how great it is, because a
heart attack can
come to your friends or loved ones any time. And even yourself. The
warm tea is faster working than tablets, capsules, cold tea,
because the warm tea opens up the cell structure--makes it expand
and accept the cayenne that much faster, and it goes directly to
the heart, through the artery system, and feeds it in powerful
food. "
Left for
Dead This book digs up the dirt on the medical
establishment saying that heart surgery can nearly kill you and do
you no good in the end, all done with a whopping price-tag. Drugs
are favored over herbs since they can be patented and sold to
patients for great profits. Dick Quinn gives his personal testimony
about nearly dying from heart surgery, but finally getting well by
takingCayenne, Garlic, Onion and
other herbs, but mainly Cayenne. He scoured the earth looking for
the hottest Cayenne he could find to burn his insides out! But no
matter how much it burns, it's all good for you. He started his own
herb company servicing mainly heart conditions which had a lot of
loyal customers until the FDA... shut him down because his cure was
effective and cheap, and the medical establishment did not profit.
I ran out and bought some Cayenne and popped several daily. I
really didn't get the energy boost he got, but I suppose they're
helping. The book tells his story first, then describes some herbs
secondly, and then ends with the disadvantages of heart surgery.
There are sage quotes about the medical establishment and goodness
of healing herbs throughout the book from distinguished men. The
book seems somewhat disjointed as it goes into its different, but
inter-related parts written by different authors. Quinn's story is
short, skims the surface, and has some drama, but certainly is not
a candidate for an Oscar winning movie. The writing style is
direct, conversational, and informative and skips all literary
flourishes to get the news out that herbs can heal. I found
particularly interesting that drugs like aspirin merely
synthetically imitate the healing effects of herbs, such as aspirin
being derived from Willow Bark.
Dr. John
Christopher, famous natural healer, praised the use of
Cayenne throughout the time of his practice. He had this to say in
his Newsletter titled "Cayenne", Vol 1, Number 12
"In 35
years of practice, and working with the people and teaching, I have
never on house calls lost one heart attack patient and the reason
is, whenever I go in--if they are still breathing--I pour down them
a cup of cayenne tea (a teaspoon of cayenne in a cup of hot water,
and within minutes they are up and around). This is one of the
fastest acting aids we could ever give for the heart, because it
feeds that heart immediately. Most hearts are suffering from
malnutrition because of processed food we are eating, but here it
gets a good powerful dose of real food and it's something that has
brought people in time after time. This is something that everyone
should know how great it is, because a heart attack can come to
your friends or loved ones any time. And even yourself. The warm
tea is faster working than tablets, capsules, cold tea, because the
warm tea opens up the cell structure--makes it expand and accept
the cayenne that much faster, and it goes directly to the heart,
through the artery system, and feeds it in powerful food.
To show the
value of cayenne, and how great it is, and what a wonderful heart
food it is, this story has been repeated in a number of
publications on doctors in the East who put some live heart tissue
into a sterile beaker filled with distilled water, and fed it
nothing but cayenne pepper, cleaning off sediments periodically and
adding nothing but distilled water from natural evaporation. During
the time that they were feeding the heart tissue, they would have
to trim it continually every few days because it would grow so
rapidly. Having no control glands (pituitary and pineal glands),
the tissue just continued to grow rapidly and, because of this,
they had to watch it over the years and the doctors and associates
kept the heart tissue alive for fifteen years.
After the doctor
died, his associates kept it alive for two more years before
destroying it so they could do more research work on it. This shows
the high food value cayenne gives to heart tissue. This is why so
many, many amazing instances have come to light, people who have
used cayenne when they had heart attacks because, in most cases,
your heart attack is a case of malnutrition. The heart hasn't had a
decent meal for so long that it is practically starved, and we give
it immediately a good meal instead of whipping it with
nitroglycerine or digitalis or some other type of drug to force it
to beat rapidly to bring more food values to the heart so that it
could find a little help to keep going. Here we give the cayenne
directly to the system, and it goes into the heart area acting as a
good full meal. Many fast responses come from this."
Historical or
traditional use of cayenne
The potent, hot
fruit of cayenne has been used as medicine for centuries. It was
considered helpful for various conditions of the gastrointestinal
tract, including stomachaches, cramping pains, and gas.
Cayenne was
frequently used to treat diseases of the circulatory system. It is
still traditionally used in herbal medicine as a circulatory tonic
(a substance believed to improve circulation). Rubbed on the skin,
cayenne is a traditional, as well as modern, remedy for rheumatic
pains and arthritis due to what is termed a counterirritant effect.
A counterirritant is something which causes irritation to a tissue
to which it is applied, thus distracting from the original
irritation (such as joint pain in the case of arthritis).
What is
the Scientific Evidence for Cayenne? Bibliography
VIDEO:
Tonics are herbs that work on the body as a whole, heightening the
general tone by improving the circulatory, hormonal, nervous, and
digestive system processes. These herbs should be thought of as
necessary foods in the restoration of health.
- See more at:
http://www.shirleys-wellness-cafe.com/NaturalFood/Cayenne.aspx#sthash.BPRfmcei.dpuf
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