I recently learned how Cayenne Pepper Can Save a Life during a heart attack. But we also know cayenne has amazing healing benefits for peripheral neuropathy. Neuropathy refers to damage to the peripheral nerves, primarily in the hands and feet. This damage results in pain, numbness, tingling, and weakness. The causes of neuropathy range from diabetes and injuries to neurotoxins found in many pharma meds.
Barbara O’Neill started out running health retreats in Australia, teaching what she calls “simple home remedies”—interventions using ingredients available in any kitchen. (source) You may have heard of her. Her talks walk us through protocols for conditions that conventional medicine just barely manages rather than resolves.
Barbara O’Neill is being applauded for the simplicity of her treatments, the excellent results, as well as her wisdom and kindness.
A man in his late fifties arrived at one of O’Neill’s retreats wheelchair-bound with multiple sclerosis. He described his feet as two lumps of rock hanging off the end of his legs. He couldn’t feel them during the day. At night, the sensation was unbearable—not pain exactly, but a weight, a wrongness, the body’s confused signals firing into numbness. He came expecting nothing. He left standing, with tears on his face, because someone had wrapped cayenne pepper and olive oil around his feet.
Barbara O’Neill’s Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment?
A double layer of paper towel, cut to foot size. Olive oil dotted across the surface—not poured, just enough to create adhesion. Half a teaspoon of cayenne pepper sprinkled on top. The foot placed directly onto this, the whole thing wrapped in cling film, a sock pulled over. Worn overnight. (source)
The first morning, the man reported he’d slept through the night with no discomfort. They skipped a night, then repeated the treatment. The next morning: tingling/pins and needles. The first sign of life returning to tissue that conventional medicine had written off.
O’Neill has repeated this protocol with others. An 80-year-old woman developed peripheral neuropathy after chemotherapy—a common side effect that oncologists mention but rarely solve. O’Neill visited her at home, prepared six compresses in advance, folded them into a ziplock bag, and left them at her bedside for the week. The woman could apply them herself each night. The results followed the same pattern: warmth returning, then sensation, then function. No clinic visits. No prescriptions. Paper towel, olive oil, cayenne pepper, and time. (source)
Cayenne Has A Self-Regulating Effect – You Know When To Stop
O’Neill explains that the protocol is self-regulating. When she puts a cayenne compress on her own feet—feet with healthy circulation—she wakes at four in the morning wanting to rip it off. The heat becomes unbearable. But someone with compromised circulation feels nothing the first night, perhaps a mild warmth the second, and only after several consecutive applications does the sensation build. The treatment essentially reads the body’s condition and responds proportionally. Healthy tissue responds fast; damaged tissue needs repetition before blood flow improves enough to register.
This video is a visual to remember. 7 minutes.
What Cayenne Actually Does For Peripheral Neuropathy
The mode of action isn’t a secret. Cayenne pepper is a blood stimulant –not in the caffeine sense –but something that moves blood through tissue. It opens capillaries and strengthens arterial walls. Any part of the body receiving more blood receives more oxygen, more of the raw materials cells need to repair, and more nutrients.
The biblical insight (Leviticus 17:11) that “the life of the flesh is in the blood” turns out to be medically correct. Tissue that doesn’t receive adequate blood flow doesn’t just underperform—it dies. O’Neill describes an outcome she’s observed repeatedly: feet that are chronically cold eventually lose sensation at the edges of the toes. The progression from “my feet are always cold” to amputation isn’t inevitable, but it’s common enough that O’Neill treats cold feet as an early warning system.
Ten Pages in Back to Eden
In Back to Eden, a 1939 compendium of herbal medicine, Jethro Kloss alloted approximately half a page to most of the herbs. Cayenne received 10 pages. That wasn’t accidental.
Kloss quoted two physicians in his extended treatment: one states it is “impossible to abuse” cayenne pepper—meaning no amount causes toxicity—while another claims it will “never cause a lesion.” The very warm sensation users feel is stimulation, not damage. At the right time, the body registers heat because blood is moving.
This safety profile matters. The question a skeptic reasonably asks is: if cayenne is so effective, why isn’t it dangerous? Most substances that produce strong physiological effects carry corresponding risks. Cayenne’s answer appears to be that it works with the body’s existing systems rather than overriding them. It doesn’t force blood where blood shouldn’t go. It opens channels and lets circulation do what circulation does when blocked.
The range of internal applications supports this. Like in my cayenne powder, ACV and raw honey recipe for sore throats and coughs—it tingles initially, then the discomfort subsides and the cough/sore throat feels relieved. It always works! For low stomach acid and sluggish digestion, O’Neill recommends a bit of cayenne in water before meals to wake up the gastric system. Some of O’Neill’s clients take it three times daily as a cardiovascular maintenance protocol, building from a few sprinkles to a quarter teaspoon over time. And cayenne tincture pairs beautifully with hawthorn tincture for heart issues like angina, high B/P, arrhythmia & CHF.
The “impossible to abuse” claim gains credibility when the same substance addresses throats, stomachs, hearts, sudden heart attacks, and feet without toxicity anywhere.
What Isn’t Being Offered
Peripheral neuropathy affects millions, particularly diabetics and chemotherapy patients. Conventional treatment focuses on managing the pain with medication –gabapentin, pregabalin, duloxetine—rather than restoring sensation by addressing the root cause. The medical literature treats lost nerve function as largely irreversible. Patients are taught to cope, to check their feet visually since they can’t feel injuries, to accept diminished capacity as permanent.
One feeling tingling or pins and needles (after two nights of cayenne compresses) represents something conventional medicine doesn’t account for. Are Barbara O’Neill’s patients experiencing placebo effects powerful enough to restore nerve function, or is something actually happening in that tissue—like blood reaching places it hadn’t reached in a while, nerves remembering how to signal, etc.?
Those two physicians Kloss quoted in his 1939 book Back to Eden, claiming cayenne is impossible to abuse and incapable of causing lesions, were making empirical observations that haven’t been disproven—only ignored. Barbara O’Neill’s materials cost just pennies and the protocol takes minutes to prepare. The question isn’t whether it works —she’s repeated the same results enough times —but why isn’t this the first thing tried?
More gifts from our Creator to help regenerate nerves:
Lion’s Mane Mushroom Remyelinates Nerves, Combats Dementia
Why This Zeolite Is So Good For Cleaning Up the Entire Body – (scroll down and read the science in both #23b and 24)
“O LORD, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all: the earth is full of thy riches.” ~Psalm 104:24
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Medical Disclaimer: I am no longer a practicing medical professional, and I am not doctor. I am a mother. I do seek scientific confirmation of the safety and effectiveness of the herbs and remedies I use. Using remedies is a personal decision. Nothing I say on this blog is intended to treat or prevent disease. Consult your own doctor.©2026 Deep Roots at Home • All Rights Reserved






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