CAPSICUM.
The ripe fruit, dried, of Capsicum frutescens,
Linné (Nat. Ord. Solanaceae). Tropical America; also cultivated in most
tropical countries. Dose, 1 to 2 grains.
Common Names: Cayenne Pepper, Guinea Pepper, Red Pepper, African
Chillies, Bird Pepper.
Principal Constituents.—Fixed oil, resin,
fats, and the rubefacient and acrid principle capsaicin (C9H14NO2)
and a volatile oil, capsicin.
Preparations.—1. Specific Medicine Capsicum. Dose,
1/10 to 2 drops, very largely diluted.
2. Tinctura Capsici, Tincture of Capsicum. Dose, 1/10 to
10 minims.
3. Emplastrum Capsici. Capsicum Plaster (Composed of Oleoresin of
Capsicum and Rubber Plaster). Rubefacient.
Specific Indications.—Marked depression and
debility, with feeble pulse and repressed secretions; pale membranes
with scanty, viscous secretion; tongue dry, harsh, and mouth and
salivary secretions suppressed or scanty; atonic dyspepsia of drunkards;
alcoholic delirium of the depressive type; congestive chill; colic, with
abdominal distention; debility with faulty gastro-intestinal functioning
in the aged.
Action.—Locally capsicum is decidedly
irritant, causing dermal heat and redness. It does not vesicate,
however, unless long and closely applied to the mucosa. The oleoresin is
much more active and causes sharp burning pain and may destroy the
epidermis.
Capsicum is a pure, energetic and permanent
stimulant. In large doses it produces vomiting, purging, pains in the
stomach and bowels, gastro-enteritis, giddiness, strangury, and a
species of intoxication and enfeeblement of nerve power. Smaller doses
give warmth to the stomach and excite a hyperaemic state of the gastric
mucosa, with increased secretion and accelerated movement of the
musculature of the stomach and bowels. It slightly increases the urine,
and is mostly eliminated by the kidneys.
Therapy.—External. Tincture of Capsicum
is an important topical stimulant, rubefacient and counter-irritant. By
its revulsive action it often relieves local pain. Painted upon
chilblains it quickly gives relief. The pure tincture alone, or mixed
with glycerin or mucilage of acacia, may be used. Applied to an aching
tooth it either relieves or aggravates, according to the sensitiveness
of the nerve or the degree of inflammation present. We have used it with
great satisfaction for pain coursing along the spermatic cord in the
lower quadrant of the abdomen. It must not, however, be allowed to come
in contact with the tender skin of the scrotum. The tincture has been
painted upon the scalp to excite the growth of hair in alopecia. With or
without glycerin or mucilage of acacia it may be used to clear up
ecchymoses. Dry capsicum in the shoes was one of Scudder's favorite
means of warming cold feet. Diluted tincture of capsicum, or capsicum
with vinegar, and sometimes with salt, is a common and useful
stimulating gargle for sluggish forms of sore throat, and sometimes
apparently aborts tonsillitis. Capsicum may be used for many of the
revulsant effects required of mustard. It does not blister nor cause
strangury when so applied. Either the tincture painted upon the part or
the capsicum plaster may give relief to so-called chronic rheumatic
pains, and be applied in lumbago, pleurodynia and intercostal neuralgia.
A stupe of hot water and capsicum applied to the nape of the neck
sometimes relieves the headache of debility.
Internal. Capsicum is a pure stimulant to the
heart and circulation, giving increased force and slightly augmented
frequency to the pulse. One thoroughly acquainted with the action of
capsicum can scarcely comprehend why physicians seek for habit-forming
stimulants which do infinite harm when so simple and efficacious and
pure a stimulant as capsicum may be had. Used within proper dosage it
can scarcely do harm, and generally results in incalculable good. Not
merely for temporary purposes is capsicum efficient, but its effects are
more or less permanent. Naturally it should be selected for atonic
conditions and avoided where irritation or active inflammation is
present. Nevertheless, in low grades of inflammation and fever, with
sluggish blood current, it is a most efficient and necessary stimulant
when given in small doses.
The infusion of capsicum is a simple domestic remedy
for acute colds, sore throat and hoarseness. Small doses of the tincture
are of the utmost value in debility with deficient gastric action. When
the membranes are pale, relaxed or flabby, and secretion is impaired or
scanty and viscous, capsicum will do more than any other agent to
rectify the condition and prepare the way for the action of other
medicines. Even where the tongue is dry and elongated and parched from
lack of secretion, and the glands of the mouth are inactive, no agent is
superior nor safer than capsicum. It has, therefore, wide usefulness in
disease-acute, subacute, or chronic. For chronic gastric catarrh it may
be used occasionally, but should not be long continued lest it increase
the malady sought to be improved. It is invaluable in some cases of
atonic dyspepsia, with deficient secretion. It is often promptly
effective in gastric flatulence, and is an agent of great value to
prevent the accumulation of gases in both stomach and intestines. A
mixture of capsicum, vinegar, and salt will sometimes prove a good
antiemetic if given in small doses diluted with cold water.
Capsicum should be largely used in low forms of
fever-the more depressed the type the more it is needed. It is then of
great advantage to maintain the equilibrium of the secretions and the
circulation. Capsicum stimulates the appetite, aids digestion,
facilitates peristalsis, and is, therefore, both stimulant and tonic to
the gastro-intestinal tract. It thus maintains the integrity of those
functions-an important desideratum during fevers and in convalescence
therefrom. In grave cases of typhoid fever, with almost complete
suppression of natural secretions, we would be at a loss without
capsicum. It sometimes checks a congestive chill, and in intermittent
fever it aids the action of quinine and other antiperiodics.
Capsicum is of very great value in alcoholic
delirium. If secretions are suppressed and food can not be taken, or if
sleep can not be induced in delirium tremens, one faces an extremely
dangerous and perhaps fatal issue. But if secretions can be
re-established and food be retained, sleep is very apt to follow. Then
the battle against death is won. For this purpose no agent will
accomplish so much as capsicum. It may be given at first in frequent
small doses in hot water; then as the stomach responds, in larger doses
in a good, strong beef broth. While capsicum is best in subacute forms
of delirium tremens and not the violent and boisterous type it sometimes
is needed after the latter to satisfy the craving for stimulants, to
overcome the sinking sensations at the pit of the stomach, to prevent
morning nausea and vomiting, to restore tone, and to render the stomach
tolerant of food. There is scarcely any danger of giving an overdose of
capsicum in dipsomania, as large quantities are swallowed with evident
relish and without ill results by confirmed dipsomaniacs. Some cases
must have alcohol, but most cases respond to capsicum. Then nux vomica,
hydrastis, black haw, hydrochloric acid, and other peptics may follow.
Capsicum is of value in many functional nervous
troubles with debility and repressed secretions, and for the aged it is
one of the few medicines that should be widely heralded for its power to
stimulate and preserve gastric tone and prolong life. In the debility of
the young or old, but particularly in old persons, when the body-heat is
low, vitality depressed, and reaction sluggish, it is an agent of power
for good. Tired, painful muscles, stiffened joints, and relaxation of
tissue are common conditions in the elderly that are, in a measure at
least, helped by capsicum.
Capsicum in very small doses is said to control
irritation and stimulate renal capillary activity in chronic renal
congestion. In similar doses it may relieve sluggish hemorrhoids,
diarrhea and dysentery, with tenacious muco-bloody stools, with tenesmus
and burning, associated with cramplike action of the bladder. These
cases are usually encountered in individuals with a lax habit of body.
For chronic, non-burning hemorrhoids with torpor and constipation, or
relaxation, Locke advised Rx Capsicum, 2 grains; Aloes, 1/4 grain. Mix.
Make 1 pill.
Capsicum, internally administered, will frequently
check frontal neuralgia, particularly if of malarial origin. It is best
to give a few preparatory doses and then follow with quinine associated
with it. One of our favorite medicines for masked malarial conditions is
an hydrochloric acid solution of quinine with capsicum added.
If called upon to say when capsicum is most valuable,
we would limit it to: (a) An agent to re-establish repressed or
suppressed secretion; (b) to a medicament for the gastric incompetence
of the aged; (c) and to a saving remedy in most cases of acute
alcoholism. The dose of capsicum for most purposes need not be large,
from the fraction of a drop of a good tincture to ten drops; or the
specific medicine not to exceed 2 drops. Only in extreme conditions, as
in delirium tremens, are large doses, even in excess of ten drops,
required. Fluid preparations of capsicum are to be preferred to powdered
capsicum for internal use on account of the rectal discomfort occasioned
by the latter. Food for the aged and debilitated may be well fortified
with capsicum, and frequently sauces, catsup, and like preparations
containing it will be found grateful to such patients. |