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About Pepper Spray

One hundred years ago, an American pharmacist named Wilbur Scoville developed a scale to measure the intensity of a pepper’s burn. The scale – as you can see on the widely used chart to the left – puts sweet bell peppers at the zero mark and the blistering habenero at up to 350,000 Scoville Units.

I checked the Scoville Scale for something else yesterday. I was looking for a way to measure the intensity of pepper spray, the kind that police have been using on Occupy protestors including this week’s shocking incident involving peacefully protesting students at the University of California-Davis.

As the chart makes clear, commercial grade pepper spray leaves even the most painful of natural peppers (the Himalayan ghost pepper) far behind. It’s listed at between 2 million and 5.3 million Scoville units. The lower number refers to the kind of pepper spray that you and I might be able to purchase for self-protective uses. And the higher number? It’s the kind of spray that police use, the super-high dose given in the orange-colored spray used at UC-Davis.

Photo courtesy: California Aggie

The reason pepper-spray ends up on the Scoville chart is that – you probably guessed this -  it’s literally derived from pepper chemistry, the compounds that make habaneros so much more formidable than the comparatively wimpy bells. Those compounds are called capsaicins and – in fact – pepper spray is more formally called Oleoresin Capsicum or OC Spray.

But we’ve taken to calling it pepper spray, I think, because that makes it sound so much more benign than it really is, like something just a grade or so above what we might mix up in a home kitchen. The description hints maybe at that eye-stinging effect that the cook occasionally experiences when making something like a jalapeno-based salsa, a little burn, nothing too serious.

Until you look it up on the Scoville scale and remember, as toxicologists love to point out, that the dose makes the poison.  That we’re not talking about cookery but a potent blast of chemistry.  So that if OC spray is the U.S. police response of choice  – and certainly, it’s been used with dismaying enthusiasm during the Occupy protests nationwide, as documented in this excellent Atlantic roundup -  it may be time to demand a more serious look at the risks involved.

 

My own purpose here is to focus on the dangers of a high level of capsaicin exposure. But as pointed out in the 2004 paper, http://www.ncmedicaljournal.com/Smith-OK.htm">Health Hazards of Pepper Spray, written by health researchers at the University of North Carolina and Duke University, the sprays contain other risky materials:

Depending on brand, an OC spray may contain water, alcohols, or organic solvents as liquid carriers; and nitrogen, carbon dioxide, or halogenated hydrocarbons (such as Freon, tetrachloroethylene, and methylene chloride) as propellants to discharge the canister contents.(3) Inhalation of high doses of some of these chemicals can produce adverse cardiac, respiratory, and neurologic effects, including arrhythmias and sudden death.

Their paper focuses mostly, though, on the dangerous associated with pepper-based compounds. In 1997, for instance, researchers at the University of California-San Francisco discovered that the “hot” sensation of habeneros and their ilk was caused by capsaicin binding directly to proteins in the membranes of pain and heat sensing neurons.  Capsaicins can activate these neurons at below body temperature, leading to a startling sensation of heat. Repeated exposure can wear the system down, depleting neurotransmitters, reducing the sensation of the pain. This knowledge has led to a number of medical treatments using capsaicins to manage pain.

Its very mechanism, though, should remind us to be wary. As the North Carolina researchers point out, any compound that can influence nerve function is, by definition, risky. Research tells us that pepper spray acts as a potent inflammatory agent. It amplifies allergic sensitivities, it irritates and damages eyes, membranes, bronchial airways, the stomach lining – basically what it touches. It works by causing pain – and, as we know, pain is the body warning us of an injury.

In general, these are short term effects. Pepper spray, for instance, induces a burning sensation in the eyes in part by damaging cells in the outer layer of the cornea.  Usually, the body repairs this kind of injury fairly neatly. But with repeated exposures, studies find, there can be permanent damage to the cornea.

The more worrisome effects have to do with inhalation – and by some reports, California university police officers deliberately put OC spray down protestors throats.  Capsaicins inflame the airways, causing swelling and restriction. And this means that pepper sprays pose a genuine risk  to people with asthma and other respiratory conditions.

And by genuine risk, I mean a known risk, a no-surprise any police department should know this risk,  easy enough to find in the scientific literature. To cite just three examples here:

1) Pepper Spray Induced Respiratory Failure Treated with Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation

2) Assessing the incapacitative effects of pepper spray during resistive encounters with the police.

3) The Human Health Effects of Pepper Spray.

That second paper is from a law enforcement journal. And the summary for that last paper notes: Studies of the effects of capsaicin on human physiology, anecdotal experience with field use of pepper spray, and controlled exposure of correctional officers in training have shown adverse effects on the lungs, larynx, middle airway, protective reflexes, and skin. Behavioral and mental health effects also may occur if pepper spray is used abusively.

Pepper spray use has been suspected of contributing to a number of deaths that occurred in police custody. In mid-1990s, the U.S. Department of Justice cited nearly 70 fatalities linked to pepper-spray use, following on a 1995 report compiled by the American Civil Liberties Union of California. The ACLU report cited 26 suspicious deaths; it’s important to note that most involved pre-existing conditions such as asthma. But it’s also important to note a troubling pattern.

In fact, in 1999, the ACLU  asked the California appeals court to declare the use of pepper spray to be dangerous and cruel. That request followed an action by northern California police officers against environmental protestors – the police were accused of dipping Q-tips into OC spray and applying them directly to the eyes of men and women engaged in an anti-logging protest.

“The ACLU believes that the use of pepper spray as a kind of chemical cattle prod on nonviolent demonstrators resisting arrest constitutes excessive force and violates the Constitution,” wrote association attorneys some 13 years ago.

Today, the University of California-Davis announced that it was suspending two of the police officers who pepper-sprayed protesting students. Eleven of those students were treated by paramedics on scene and two were sent to a hospital in Sacramento for more intensive treatment.

Undoubtedly, these injuries will factor into another scientific study of pepper spray, another acknowledgement that top of the Scoville scale is dangerous territory. But my own preference is that we start learning from these mistakes without waiting another 13 years or more, without engaging in yet another cycle of abuse and injury.

Now would be good.

 



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Scoville Units
Chile Pepper Heat Range
  Sweet Bell 0
  Sweet Banana 0
  Pimento 0
  Paprika-Super Red 50 ~ 200
Cherry 00 ~ 500
  Pepperoncini 100 ~ 500
  Sonora 300 ~ 600
  El-Paso 500 ~ 700
  Santa Fe Grande 500 ~ 750
  NuMex R Naky 500 ~ 1,000
  Coronado 700 ~ 1,000
  TAM Mild Jalapeno 1,000 ~ 1,500
  New Mexico 6-4 1,000 ~ 1,500
  Poblano 500 ~ 2,000
  Espanola 1,000 ~ 2,000
  Ancho 1,000 ~ 2,000
  Mulato 1,000 ~ 2,000
  Pasilla 1,000 ~ 2,000
  Anaheim 500 ~ 2,500
  Sandia 500 ~ 2,500
  Cascabel 1,000 ~ 2,500
  NuMex Big Jim 1,500 ~ 2,500
  Rocotillo 1,500 ~ 2,500
Peter 1,500 ~ 2,500
  Pulla 700 ~ 3,000
  NuMex Joe E. Parker 1,500 ~ 3,500
  Big Jim Heritage 2,000 ~ 4,000
  Espanola Improved 2,000 ~ 4,000
  Bulgarian Carrot 2,000 ~ 5,000
  Mirasol 2,500 ~ 5,000
  Guajillo 2,500 ~ 5,000
  NM 6-4 Heritage 3,000 ~ 5,000
  Chimayo 4,000 ~ 6,000
  Hatch Green 5,00 ~ 6,000
  Barker's Hot 5,00 ~ 7,000
Chipotle 5,000 ~ 8,000
  Fresno 2,500 ~ 8,500
  Long Thick Cayenne 6,000 ~ 8,500
  Jalapeño 2,500 ~ 9,000
  Hot Wax 5,000 ~ 9,000
  Sandia Hot 7,000 ~ 9,000
  Puya 5,000 ~ 10,000
  Hidalgo 6,000 ~ 17,000
  Aji Escabeche 12,000 ~ 17,000
  Serrano 8,000 ~ 22,000
Bolivian Rainbow 10,000 ~ 30,000
  Manzano 12,000 ~ 30,000
  Shipkas 12,000 ~ 30,000
  NuMex Barker's Hot 15,000 ~ 30,000
De Arbol 15,000 ~ 30,000
  Jwala Finger Hot 20,000 ~ 30,000
  Jaloro 30,000 ~ 50,000
Aji 30,000 ~ 50,000
Tabasco 30,000 ~ 50,000
  Cayenne 30,000 ~ 50,000
  Santaka 40,000 ~ 50,000
  Super Chile 40,000 ~ 50,000
  Piquin 40,000 ~ 58,000
  Tien Tsin 50,000 ~ 70,000
  NuMex XX Hot 60,000 ~ 70,000
Yatsafusa 50,000 ~ 75,000
  Red Amazon 55,000 ~ 75,000
  Haimen 70,000 ~ 80,000
Chiltecpin 60,000 ~ 85,000
Thai 50,000 ~ 100,000
  Diablo Grande 60,000 ~ 100,000
  Malagueta 60,000 ~ 100,000
  Charleston 70,000 ~ 100,000
  Pico de Pajaro 70,000 ~ 100,000
  Merah 85,000 ~ 100,000
  Bahamian 95,000 ~ 110,000
  Tabiche 85,000 ~ 115,000
  Bahamian 95,000 ~ 110,000
  Carolina Cayenne 100,000 ~ 125,000
  Kumataka 125,000 ~ 150,000
  Bahamian 125,000 ~ 300,000
  Jamaican Hot 100,000 ~ 200,000
  Birds Eye 100,000 ~ 225,000
  Madame Jeanette 175,000 ~ 225,000
Tepin (Wild) 100,000 ~ 265,000
Texas Chiltepin 100,000 ~ 265,000
  Datil 100,000 ~ 300,000
Devil Toung 125,000 ~ 325,000
Fatalii 125,000 ~ 325,000
  Orange Habanero 150,000 ~ 325,000
  Scotch Bonnet 150,000 ~ 325,000
  TigrePaw-NR 265,000 ~ 348,000
  Rocoto / Manzano 225,000 ~ 350,000
  Caribbean Red 120,000 ~ 400,000
Choclate Habanero 325,000 ~ 425,000
Red Savina Habanero 350,000 ~ 575,000
  Dorset Naga 800,000 ~ 970,000
Naga Jolokia "Ghost Pepper" 800,000 ~ 1,041,000
  Infinity 800,000 ~ 1,067,286
  Naga Viper 800,000 ~ 1,382,118
Trinidad Scorpion 900,000 ~ 1,463,700
Common Pepper Spray 2-3,000,000
Police Grade Spray 5,300,000
Homodihydrocapsaicin 8,600,000
Nordihydrocapsaicin 9,100,000

Pure Capsaicin

15-16,000,000



should have made it hotter... maybe then the hippies would have had more of a reaction to it....
and actually leave





On 2/24/13, MB1025 said:
You know I was always wondering why no one ever used the dollar sign for $ony, but then I realized they have no money so it would be pointless.

^^lol

OT: I hate seeing things like this happen, but after some thought, I do think using pepper spray is the least harmful way for the police to get whatever it is done :(



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From my understanding of it, which is heavily based on the local police policies, Pepper-Spray is only supposed to be used in situations where physical force is justified; and the use is then promoted because pepper-spray is less dangerous than being hit by a police officer.

While there is a small part of me that finds it funny to see protestors with such juvenile attitudes punished by being pepper-sprayed after they are in custody (and it could be a funny bit for the right comedian) it really is no different from a police officer striking an individual who is in custody; and is the sign that this officer should probably never have been an officer, and I think that it might be appropriate to have him face criminal charges.