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Review of the Candida Diet also known as the Anti-Candida Diet and why it typically does not produce desired results long-term with only short-term alleviation of symptoms.
Thinking of going on the Candida Diet to heal your gut and stop sugar and carb cravings?
While this may seem like a logical idea at first, be warned that it likely won’t heal you over the long term.
The article below explains why as well as my personal experience with it.
What is Candida Anyway?
Candida is a term that refers to a large family of yeasts, or one-celled fungi. Under normal circumstances, these organisms harmlessly inhabit the tissues of humans. This is because a balanced intestinal tract from mouth to colon contains a preponderance of beneficial bacteria that keep Candida in check.
When not enough beneficial bacteria are present in given body tissue to keep pathogenic yeasts under control, it transforms from a harmless state into an invasive species. In this rapidly growing state, Candida puts out long stringy hyphae or “roots”.
They have the ability to embed and penetrate through the gut wall and eventually cause leaky gut.
Candida overgrowth can occur in many tissues of the body. Well-known examples are oral candidiasis known as thrush, the scalp as dandruff, and vaginal yeast infections.
What Causes Fungal Overgrowth?
Candida is an opportunistic pathogen that can rapidly take over when a person is under a course of antibiotics. Antibiotics decimate beneficial gut flora but have little effect on Candida. This gives this normally harmless yeast the chance to take over dominance of the gut environment very quickly.
Many women don’t realize it, but oral contraceptives imbalance the gut in the same way as antibiotics. Again, this gives pathogenic strains of yeast an open door to take control.
A diet of processed foods high in sugars and simple carbohydrates also encourages Candida overgrowth as yeasts thrive on sugars.
Babies born via C-Section or to mothers who were treated with IV antibiotics during labor are especially vulnerable.
The reason is that they are not exposed to Mom’s healthy flora in the birth canal prior to birth.
Symptoms
Symptoms of Candida overgrowth are many the most common being fogginess in the morning upon waking (brain fog), digestive complaints of all kinds and a myriad of skin issues.
Many women plagued by yeast infections don’t realize that the source of the problem is actually their diet.
Over time, this leads to a pathogenic state in the gut environment. Using drugs and creams to resolve the problem is only a temporary solution when the source of the problem – gut imbalance – is not addressed head-on.
The Candida Diet
My husband and I tried the Candida Diet to resolve gut imbalance many years ago that had been exacerbated by our stressful and overworked lifestyle at the time.
It failed miserably!
Why?
The Candida Diet only goes part of the way in doing what is necessary to resolve gut imbalance.
It also did not include foods and supplements that help repair the intestinal damage caused by the overgrowth of pathogenic yeast.
For example, the Candida Diet removes sugar from the diet in all forms…even maple syrup and honey. Fresh fruit, however, is commonly allowed.
Candida overgrowth can frequently trigger an allergy to molds and other types of fungi. Hence, beneficial fermented foods including cheese are also eliminated along with any bread and other foods containing yeast.
Other foods excluded from the Candida Diet include vinegar, mushrooms, tea, coffee, dried fruit, and any form of fruit juices.
Temporary Improvement But No Healing
The typical scenario for a person who goes on the Candida Diet goes something like this:
- They feel better almost immediately primarily because all the sugar has been removed from their diet.
- They continue on the diet for some time perhaps many months or even a year. Pleased to see that symptoms diminish considerably during that time, they are convinced that the diet has “worked”.
- After a period of time, they try to reintroduce some of the foods that were removed. Sadly, they usually discover that their symptoms come raging back with full force.
- They realize that it is going to be next to impossible to continue the Candida Diet indefinitely. It is simply too hard to give up cheese and any and all sweets forever.
- They get discouraged, give up and stop the Candida Diet for good.
3 Reasons Why the Candida Diet Fails
The paradox of the Candida Diet is that symptoms greatly diminish. However, the patient doesn’t actually heal from the root cause of the problem which is a breach in the integrity of the gut lining.
Long-term healing is prevented on the Anti-Candida Diet for the following key reasons:
Reason #1
The Candida Diet allows starchy vegetables and tubers like sweet potato, cassava, yams, and arrowroot.
Note that some anti-candida diet practitioners recommend caution with these foods, but others do not.
Reason #2
The Candida Diet doesn’t include a small cup of traditional bone broth with every single meal. This is an incredibly necessary food for proper healing/sealing of the gut wall caused by candida overgrowth.
For more severe cases, short-cooked meat stock needs to be used and NOT bone broth. Some people cannot tolerate the glutamate in long-cooked broths.
Long-term gut healing is quite simply NOT going to occur without using the correct form of stock or broth.
Thus, any candida diet benefits will usually be temporary.
Reason #3
More important than the allowance of starch in the Candida Diet is the inclusion of grain-based foods. Some practitioners recommending the Candida Diet misguidedly include gluten-free grains.
Others recommend none at all (in an apparent scramble to mimic diets that actually work to fix the gut like GAPS and to a lesser extent the bone broth diet).
The bottom line is that there is no uniformity to what is recommended, hence, the protocol’s unreliability in providing relief over the long-term.
Anti-Candida Diet Shortfall
Even if the Candida Diet is used in conjunction with a gluten-free, casein-free diet, it fails in the majority of instances.
The reason is that disaccharides, or double sugars, are present in many carbohydrates including ALL grains – not just gluten-containing ones.
An inflamed, imbalanced gut overridden with Candida is unable to digest double sugar molecules completely. This occurs because the lack of beneficial gut flora has compromised the function of the enterocytes.
According to Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD, author of Gut and Psychology Syndrome and one of the key scientists at the forefront of gut restoration research today, the enterocytes are the cells that reside on the villi of the gut wall and produce the enzyme disaccharidase.
This enzyme breaks down the disaccharide molecule into easily absorbed monosaccharide molecules.
When the enterocytes are not nourished and strengthened properly by adequate beneficial flora, they become weak and diseased and may even turn cancerous. They do not perform their duties of digesting and absorbing food properly.
Undigested Food Nourishes Pathogenic Yeast
Weak and diseased enterocytes also have trouble digesting starch molecules. They are very large with hundreds of mono sugars connected in long branchlike strands.
People with weak digestion due to Candida overgrowth and messed up enterocytes have a terrible time digesting these complex molecules.
The result is a large amount of undigested starch in the gut. The putrefying matter is the perfect food for pathogenic yeasts, bacteria, and fungi like Candida to thrive upon.
Even the starch that manages to get digested results in molecules of maltose, which is — you guessed it — a disaccharide! This maltose also goes undigested due to a lack of the enzyme disaccharidase and becomes additional food for Candida.
Biggest Candida Diet Benefit
We’ve established that the Candida Diet usually fails miserably in resolving gut imbalance problems over the long haul.
However, it does include and recommend one fantastic herb that is very helpful for keeping Candida under control if only temporarily…Pau d’Arco tea.
I’ve found this herb is especially helpful during traveling (when the diet is less than optimal) or for a few days after you get home to get back on the wagon.
What is the Best Diet for Candida?
In conclusion, it is best not to waste your time with the Candida Diet. It doesn’t work in the majority of cases and you will ultimately feel frustrated in your efforts to heal over the long term.
The best diets for healing and sealing the gut wall and permanently rebalancing the gut environment are the GAPS Diet or the very similar SCD (Specific Carbohydrate) Diet.
To read more about the GAPS Diet and what the food list includes, check out this introductory post on using GAPS to heal autoimmune disease.
Also, this post The Five Most Common GAPS Diet Mistakes is a review of the most common pitfalls of this approach to gut healing.
Reference
Gut and Psychology Syndrome, Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD
More Information
Macrobiotic Diet and Extreme Vitamin D Deficiency
Biofilms: Overlooked Step in Treating Candida
Can Candida Sufferers Drink Kombucha?
How to Take Probiotics
Inna Zaretsky
I also just started Candida diet 6 weeks ago. I just started a group for people who are on Candida Diet. Please join as and share your experience. I am hoping we can support each other and see what works
https://www.facebook.com/groups/685136058200401/
Trey
This is the real deal. A candida diet with no starches and no grains. It’ll make one sick if one starts too quickly though, be warned. Also, it can be unpleasant in the initial stages. The first week had me battling cravings and feeling like a zombie. Better, much better, after that.
This fine woman, Bee, knows exactly what she’s talking about. My candida was CURED after ONLY THREE WEEKS. If it works for you, feel free to give her a donation or just email her saying how thankful you are, because she’s not selling anything! She gets no money from this!
Mohini
This a scam diet. Also sells the products as well. Why listen to things that still cannot cure cancer.
How do you know that you have this fungus and start this diet without even measure.
The story on this fungus is that it does not exist, is all imagined and this is the reason why when you measure the strain you will not see the results.
Biggest scam I have ever come across.
Jamai
Why would you leave a comment about something you know nothing about or don’t believe? I DO have Candida. I was tested. It does exist.
Meredith
Glad to hear you stand up for yourself. So many ignorant people believe if a doctor doesn’t support what their body tells them, they ignore their symptoms or dismiss yours. I had a wose MD tell me the only thing to trust is your own body. If you find eliminating certain foods helps health and well being, even if a test says it doesn’t cause the symptoms, but your body knows it does, why would you trust the test?
Chad
There is a diet that works called the Ultimate Candida Diet and it cuts right to the chase.
You can’t have potatoes and fruit first of all, it will never work.
There are alot of don’t on this diet so not following it they way it’s presented will leave you failing the diet and in poor health. However, following the diet as it’s explained will bring you and your system back to great health. I’m half way through and I feel better than I have in 10 years.
Shelby Fisher
That’s what I was saying. Fruits and any kinds of starches would persist the candida. It didn’t WORK for this silly blogger because she did it wrong.
I’m just finding out about this about a week ago and I’m about to go grocery shopping for the first time to get better foods for this.
Acidophilus, Vitamin B Complex, Vitamin B, Garlic and L-Glutamine tablets have been helping AMAZINGLY.
Cutting sugar and lactose has helped as well.
Going gluten free is going to be the hardest but I’ll do my best.
Cheryl Koster via Facebook
you really need to do dome reading on this website http://www.yeastinfectionadvisor.com
Cheryl Koster via Facebook
hmm not agreeing on this one at all. The candida diet should not allow starches like potatoes or grains of any kind for a few months. I was on a grassfed meat and organic veggies only diet for a while then I was able to add nuts then eventually oats and rice and some starchy vegetables. It helped me A TON and made me realize how unhealthy I was eating. I also took Candex and Nystatin for a while too and ate tons of garlic. I would not write off the diet but make sure you are on a true candida diet.
Kathryn Roux Dickerson via Facebook
I don’t know what candida diet you are referring to. There are several different books out there. The one i followed did not allow fruit at all in stage one, nor breads or other starches. They were added back in slowly over time (and that was when i learned i was gluten-intolerant). I couldn’t go back to eating grains.
Guisella
From what I understand, Pau D’arco tea is actually not allowed in the SCD. I read that the tea could be an immune stimulant and that could further aggravate inflammation in an over active immune system. Is this correct?
Lauren Bretz via Facebook
Valerie Clark and Courtney Taylor Smeltzer, this is very interesting and was very true for me years ago. I actually have tons of Pau d’Arco, if you’d like some to add into your regimens. 🙂 I think the Ocotea was a great addition, Courtney.
Rebecca Bruce via Facebook
Laurie Redding-Lewis this looks like a great site on FB. I love you Auntie. Thanks you for being so awesome.
Barbara Heimlich via Facebook
I have a huge bone to pick about Candida. Twenty years ago when everyone thought it was a myth that didn’t even exist, I got so sick, I could barely walk. I went to every specialist known to man and then I found a wonderful Dr, who was ahead of her time. She suspected candida and at that time there was only one lab in the U.S. that even tested for it. Mine was so bad that it was in my bloodstream. She put me on a candida diet and probiotics, which also no one believed in at the time. There were hardly any health food stores at the time so eating was tough but I learned the fine art of substitution. Within 6 months, I was a new person and have pretty much stay on a modified version of the diet ever since. With each generation, there comes new ideas and that’s not bad but to say this diet doesn’t work, if done right is just wrong. Some people have a tendency for candida and some not so much but it you do, it’s not just a diet change, it’s a life style change. With the crap food out there, you can never let your guard down. A good Dr and a good way of eating saved my life. This was the same Dr that talked about fibromyalgia when everyone thought she was whacked…and now we have experts coming out of the woodwork. I’ve been at organic for a very long time, long before all these wonderful health food store were around to make it easy. She also used bioidentical hormones, which everyone pooh poohed. I was a lucky one and would never discount a food life change. If you look for a quick fix, that’s what will fail. This was just to enlighten some on how truly serious candida can be if it goes too far. Mine started with antibiotics for dental work and it was down hill from there. Much has been learned since then and even more to be learned.
Tony
Great post! I have some crazy reactions to foods like face bloating, and especially lately eczema even form juicing certain greens and certain other health foods. When I tell some people this they act as if I’m out of my mind or something. The more I look into it the more I’m convinced it’s Candida, especially after the one year binge I went on eating tons of chocolate and ice cream. I got so bad from eating sweets I couldn’t exercise or even walk down the steps as my knees hurt so bad which lead to more depression and more sweets which is around the time I went on the binge for about a year.
After a year of this I finally figured out it was sugar doing this. I cleaned up my act since but never did do a thorough cleanse or candida diet. Now I can’t even juice without my face breaking out with eczema all over the place. Time to take care of this once and for all. I no longer eat ANY sweets but coffee is going to be a tough one to give up. I only drink about two cups in the morning per day but boy do I look forward to that each morning 🙂
Tony
I should add, I could actually walk down the steps but not without severe pain in my knees. I had to walk kind of sideways and even that still hurt my knees….