Not sure where to put this topic, so i decided to put it in here.
I was looking up some of the health benefits associated with eating chile peppers.
Some studies have found that asthma, bronchitis, arthritus, strokes, heart attacks and prostate cancer were some of the
health problems supposedly helped or improved through the regular use of adding chile peppers into our daily food intake.
But in some of these reports, it was sometimes mentioned that overuse of chile peppers in the diet could lead to stomach cancer.
I was curious if this was or wasn't true. So I did a google search.
http://www.drmirkin.com/archive/6150.html
This report surmised that the incidence of stomach cancer wasn't necessarily from eating a lot of chile peppers, but
because the people in Mexico that had the higher incidence of stomach cancer were the poorer people. It also just happened
that these poor people ate more chile peppers. So it would seem that the correlation between stomach cancer and living
environment would be higher than the correlation between developing that type of cancer and the eating of hot peppers.
Now that is probably not the end of this discussion, nor the definitive conclusion to be reached here, but whenever I hear
of another study coming out, I'm not always sold on it.
Just another doubting Doug, I guess.
Doug
dvg
I was looking up some of the health benefits associated with eating chile peppers.
Some studies have found that asthma, bronchitis, arthritus, strokes, heart attacks and prostate cancer were some of the
health problems supposedly helped or improved through the regular use of adding chile peppers into our daily food intake.
But in some of these reports, it was sometimes mentioned that overuse of chile peppers in the diet could lead to stomach cancer.
I was curious if this was or wasn't true. So I did a google search.
http://www.drmirkin.com/archive/6150.html
This report surmised that the incidence of stomach cancer wasn't necessarily from eating a lot of chile peppers, but
because the people in Mexico that had the higher incidence of stomach cancer were the poorer people. It also just happened
that these poor people ate more chile peppers. So it would seem that the correlation between stomach cancer and living
environment would be higher than the correlation between developing that type of cancer and the eating of hot peppers.
Now that is probably not the end of this discussion, nor the definitive conclusion to be reached here, but whenever I hear
of another study coming out, I'm not always sold on it.
Just another doubting Doug, I guess.
Doug
dvg