Scientists have created a miniature model of human pain, in the form of nerve cells growing in a laboratory dish that respond to the discomfort of hot chillies and other kinds of physical distress.
They may not yet say "ouch" when pinched, but the living nerve cells show they are just as sensitive to painful stimuli whether they come in the form of high temperatures or the chemical ingredient that makes chillies feel so hot.
Harvard University researchers said they have generated the human nerve cells that normally send painful stimuli to the brain by re-programming ordinary skin cells experimentally so that they develop into fully mature, adult pain neurons.
The result is "pain in a dish" which they believe could be used to discover new kinds of analgesics and other forms of pain relief, as well as helping to find out why some people are more prone to feeling chronic pain than others.
"Pain is arguably one of the most important of our sensory applications. It warns us of danger in the environment and we're exposed to a lot of things that can damage our sensitive biological systems," said Clifford Woolf of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts.