Why Does Your Nose Run When You Eat Spicy Food?
Uh-oh. Judging from your reaction, that chunk of Indian food you just bit into wasn’t some harmless vegetable, but a bhut jolokia, the world’s hottest chili pepper, according to Guinness World Records.
Eyes watering? Mouth on fire? Nose gushing? Don’t worry. There are ways
to lessen, maybe even avoid, the next six to eight hours of relative
agony, but first maybe you’d like to know why spicy food causes your
nose to flood like the Brahmaputra River during monsoon season.
The distinctive spiciness of chili peppers derives from the chemical
capsaicin, which causes a burning sensation when in contact with bodily
tissues.
What causes the burn
Capsicum plants produce capsaicin in their fruits, which are chili
peppers, to fend off hungry mammals. Its irritant qualities are so
pronounced that pepper sprays made from it are more debilitating than
tear gas, according to the European Parliament’s Scientific and
Technological Options Assessment report.
However, capsaicin is
only the best-known of the spicy food irritants. Another, allyl
isothiocyanate, is an oil that lends its kick to radishes, horseradish,
wasabi and mustard. Manufacturers also use it as an ingredient in
insecticides and fungicides.
What does all of this have to do with your runny nose? Capsaicin and allyl isothiocyanate irritate mucous membranes –
the linings protecting your lungs and various body openings and
cavities from infectious agents such as fungi, bacteria and viruses.
Mucous membranes in your nose produce nasal mucus,
better known to children everywhere as snot, which traps allergens,
airborne dust and other undesirables, keeping them out of your
respiratory system. The more irritated your nasal membranes become, the
more mucus they produce as a defense.
What to do
If you’re in over your head and looking for the best way to beat the
heat, skip water and beer and reach for milk instead. Capsaicin has an
oily quality that keeps it from dissolving in water, so even guzzling
straight from the tap will do you no good, and beer contains too little alcohol to have more effect than water.
Milk, on the other hand, quenches capsaicin’s fire quite effectively,
according to research published in the journal Physiology &
Behavior. It contains a protein called casein, which is a lipophilic
("fat-loving") molecule that hugs the capsaicin molecules and washes
them away, much like detergents wash away grease.
According to that same research, a chemical reaction with sucrose (table sugar) can also smother capsaicin’s sizzle, so if there’s no milk handy, try a 10 percent solution of sugar in a cold glass of water.

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