Your spit has a painkiller 6 times stronger than morphine. It contains a substance called opiorphin that is stronger than morphine.
Your Saliva Contains a Painkiller Stronger Than Morphine
Next time you get a paper cut and instinctively put your finger in your mouth, you're not just comforting yourself—you're administering a powerful painkiller. Human saliva contains a natural substance called opiorphin that researchers have found to be six times more potent than morphine in animal studies.
Discovered in 2006 by scientists at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, this pentapeptide (a chain of five amino acids) represents one of the most exciting developments in pain research. What makes it remarkable isn't just its potency, but how it works—and what it doesn't do.
A Smarter Way to Kill Pain
Unlike morphine and other opioid drugs that directly bind to pain receptors, opiorphin takes a more subtle approach. Your body naturally produces enkephalins, which are endogenous opioids—essentially, your built-in painkillers. The problem is that these enkephalins break down quickly in your system.
Opiorphin works by blocking the enzymes that destroy enkephalins, allowing your body's natural painkillers to stick around longer and do their job more effectively. It's like plugging a leak instead of constantly refilling the bucket.
The Morphine Problem It Could Solve
Morphine is one of medicine's most powerful tools against pain, but it comes with serious baggage:
- Addiction potential—the opioid crisis has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives
- Tolerance—patients need increasingly higher doses over time
- Respiratory depression—high doses can slow or stop breathing
- Constipation, nausea, and drowsiness—common side effects that diminish quality of life
In animal studies, opiorphin demonstrated potent pain relief without causing addiction or tolerance after repeated use. Test subjects didn't need higher doses over time, and they didn't exhibit drug-seeking behavior when the substance was removed.
From Spit to Prescription?
Before you start bottling your saliva, there's a catch: the amount of opiorphin in your mouth is tiny, and it breaks down quickly when swallowed. That's why pharmaceutical company Stragen partnered with Institut Pasteur to develop STR-324, a modified version designed to be stable enough for oral or intravenous use.
In 2018, STR-324 entered Phase I clinical trials in the Netherlands with 78 healthy volunteers. The study aimed to assess safety, tolerability, and effectiveness in humans—the crucial first step toward becoming an actual medication.
As of 2024, opiorphin continues to be studied in various pain contexts, including neuropathic pain and burning mouth syndrome, though widespread clinical availability remains years away.
Why Evolution Gave Us Spit Painkillers
The presence of opiorphin in saliva might seem random, but it makes evolutionary sense. Your mouth is constantly subjected to minor injuries—biting your cheek, burning your tongue on hot coffee, irritation from sharp foods. Having a built-in painkiller at the injury site provides immediate, localized relief without the need to flood your entire system with analgesics.
It's also worth noting that saliva contains numerous other protective substances: antibacterial compounds, enzymes that start digesting food, and proteins that help wounds heal faster. Opiorphin is just one member of this biochemical first-aid kit you carry around in your mouth.
The next time someone tells you to "stop whining and suck it up," you can inform them that sucking it up is actually medically sound advice—at least when it involves getting saliva on a minor wound.
