capsaicin, the most abundant of the pungent principles of hot peppers (Capsicum). It is an organic nitrogen compound belonging to the lipid group, but it is often erroneously classed among the alkaloids, a family of nitrogenous compounds with marked physiological effects.
The name capsaicin was applied to a colourless crystalline substance first isolated from capsicum oleoresin (an oily resin derived from pepper fruits) in 1876 and considered a single compound until about 1960. During the 1960s the natural product was found to contain small amounts of other compounds, known as capsaicinoids, that are very similar to the one for which the name capsaicin had become established. The molecular formula for capsaicin is C18H27NO3.
Capsaicin is the predominant spicy component of chili peppers, the pungency of which is often measured in Scoville Heat Units (SHU). Created by American pharmacist Wilbur Scoville in the early 1900s, the Scoville scale is a subjective assessment that relies on the capsaicinoid sensitivity of people experienced with eating hot peppers. The ratings work on a linear scale, meaning that a 350,000-SHU habanero is 100 times hotter than a 3,500-SHU jalapeño. One of the world’s hottest peppers, the ghost pepper, measures more than 1,000,000 SHU.
Capsaicin creams and gels are used as topical analgesics to relieve muscle and joint pain, including arthritis pain, and pain from neuralgia and neuropathy.