The GAPS Diet is a healing protocol based on the 100 year old, scientifically backed Specific Carbohydrate Diet, also called SCD.
It was first developed by Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD based on her clinical experience with hundreds of patients and detailed in Gut and Psychology Syndrome (GAPS).
The GAPS book is an eye opening read about how the microbial environment within the gut can affect a person’s neurology and physiology.
This post discusses how to use the GAPS Diet to reverse conditions that are autoimmune in nature. Examples of GAPS conditions include allergies, eczema, psoriasis, ADD/ADHD, autism, celiac disease, asthma, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, IBS, obsessive-compulsive disorder, depression, anxiety, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, fibromyalgia, diabetes, cancer, and the list goes on and on.
These conditions all can be traced to unfavorable conditions within the gut that cause undigested bits of food as well as pathogens and toxins to spill into the blood causing an unpredictable mix of autoimmune symptoms within the body.
That’s right – all autoimmune disease is rooted in the gut!
The GAPS diet as recommended by Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD limits food intake to those items that can be fully digested even within a compromised gut environment thereby allowing the gut wall to heal. When the gut wall is allowed to finally heal by removing foods that cannot be fully digested, the holes in the gut wall reseal and the toxins that are causing autoimmune symptoms stop spilling into the blood and wreaking havoc in the body.
What Foods Do People on GAPS Diet Need to Avoid
At first read, the GAPS diet can seem quite complicated. In actuality, it is really very simple.
There are primarily two types of food molecules that folks in the process of healing their guts need to avoid:
- Disaccharides
- Starches (including resistant starch)
Disaccharides, or double sugars, are present in many carbohydrates including ALL grains. The compromised gut is unable to digest double sugar molecules because the lack of beneficial gut flora compromises the function of the enterocytes.
The enterocytes are the cells that reside on the villi of the gut wall and produce the enzyme disaccharidase which 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.
The critical importance of the enterocytes to health cannot be overstated!
Weak and diseased enterocytes also have trouble digesting starch molecules which are very large with hundreds of monosugars connected in long branchlike strands. People with weak digestion due to an imbalance of gut flora and messed up enterocytes have a terrible time digesting these complex molecules leaving large amounts of it undigested- the perfect food for pathogenic yeasts, bacteria, fungi and other pathogens 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 gut pathogens.
The GAPS Diet Bottom Line
Therefore, all foods containing disaccharide and starch molecules must be removed from the diet of a GAPS child or adult in order to allow the enterocytes to strengthen and heal the gut wall.
Dr. Campbell-McBride MD writes that clinical practice has shown that given enough time, the gut usually will again be able to digest these foods without any ill effects (aka, autoimmune disease) to the person consuming them.
The GAPS Diet is not a forever thing. It is a temporary measure to heal the gut wall and restrengthen the enterocytes so normal life can be regained without the burden of autoimmune disease. These GAPS recipes can make implementing the protocol much easier.
Foods To Eliminate
The GAPS child or adult must avoid all grains and any food that contains them. This includes wheat, einkorn, rye, rice, corn, oats, amaranth, kamut, spelt, triticale, barley, buckwheat, millet, teff, bulgur wheat, quinoa and any others.
In addition, Starchy vegetables like white and sweet potatoes, tapioca, cassava, parsnip, arrowroot and taro must be eliminated from the diet for a time.
Starchy beans and peas must also be avoided which includes pretty much all of them with the exception of green peas and navy beans.
All sugars including the lactose in milk and cream must be avoided. Raw honey, date sugar and syrup, and very ripe fruit would be the only sweets allowed. Fermented dairy like yogurt and kefir as well as butter and ghee are permitted unless the GAPS condition is severe.
How Long to Healing on GAPS?
Dr. Campbell-McBride says that, on average, it takes a child 6-18 months on the GAPS diet for the gut to heal. For an adult, it may take longer.
Note that it will not necessarily take this long for symptoms to subside, however. It is possible for symptoms to be substantially gone within weeks of eliminating these foods from the diet. Subsiding of symptoms does not mean the person is ready to consume grains and starches again, though.
Every person is different and the severity of his/her gut imbalance will determine how long it takes for the enterocytes to become strong again, the gut wall to heal and seal, and the ability to digest disaccharide and starch molecules regained.
Probiotics Alone Will Not Heal Your Gut
I’ve had folks say to me that they don’t need to go on the GAPS diet as they take a probiotic on a daily basis and eat probiotic rich, whole foods.
Please be aware that changing to even a completely unprocessed, whole foods diet and taking a daily probiotic will not necessarily heal your gut!
This approach alone will not heal your enterocytes and heal/seal the gut wall from years of abuse by antibiotics, the pill, other drugs, and processed foods.
The reason is that the enterocytes reside on the gut wall and the balance of flora on the gut wall cannot be changed. A probiotic supplement is not able to re-colonize this area of the gut!
Dr. Campbell-McBride MD writes that probably the only time that in our entire lives where we can populate the gut wall with beneficial bacteria is at birth.
Therefore, the only way to heal the enterocytes and the gut wall is to take away the food of the pathogens (disaccharides and starches) so that they weaken and the beneficial flora consumed by a probiotic can take hold and re-establish dominance in the rest of the gut.
Then, when these foods are re-introduced at a later time, the enterocytes will be strong and able to digest and handle them properly. This simply will not ever happen unless a period of time to heal these important little cells occurs.
Also note that even after healing, the gut will require constant infusion of probiotics on a daily basis. You can either supplement your diet with probiotic rich foods like yogurt, kefir, homemade saurkraut, kombucha and others or you can continue taking a therapeutic strength probiotic such as Bio-kult, which is recommended by Dr. Campbell-McBride.
GAPS Conclusions
One autoimmune disease begets another, so if you or someone you love has allergies or another mild form of autoimmune disorder, more severe autoimmune disease will very likely take hold in the future unless the root of the problem (gut imbalance) is addressed.
Autoimmune disease never gets better – it only gets worse over time.
Of course, severe autoimmune disease mandates the GAPS Diet as perhaps the only viable option for reversal and healing.
For this reason, it may be worthwhile to consider the GAPS diet as a measure to fix gut dysbiosis once and for all.
More Information on the GAPS Diet
Overwhelmed by the GAPS Diet? Help Has Arrived
How to Speed Healing and Shorten Time on the GAPS Diet
The Five Most Common GAPS Diet Mistakes
Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) for Autoimmune Disease
GAPS Diet Heals Ulcerative Colitis
FPIES: Resolving the “Other” Food Allergy
5 Steps to Healing IBS Naturally
Hannah’s Story: 2 Years on GAPS Diet Heals Autism
Chronic Stomach Pain and Bloating Gone!
How to Hold a GAPS Style, Grain Free Birthday Party
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Courtney
I have to agree, things like OCD and Autism have NOTHING to do with autoimmune disorders. Autism is classified as a developmental disorder and CANNOT be cured; it is only treatable, and symptoms can be managed with the right treatment. All of this information can be found on many websites, including Vanderbilt’s autism site and The Mayo Clinic.
Sarah
OCD and Autism ARE autoimmune disorders! See Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD’s book on the subject. She describes the whole scenario in detail.
P Perry
You mislead people by listing several neurological disorders, including Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), and stating they are autoimmune diseases. Some variants of the ones listed, yes, but not all as specific groups, which would be the common inference to what you have written..
academia.edu/2253669/Obsessive_Compulsive_Disorder_and_DIfferentiation_between_Non-Autoimmune_OCD_and_the_Autoimmune_version_of_the_disease_called_PANDAS
Sarah
OCD is an autoimmune disorder … read the GAPS book and notice how Dr. Campbell-McBride explains the origins of OCD .. it is a gut related problem just like all other auto-immunity issues.
Sarah
I was googling for some other things and saw this article for autoimmune diseases say it was okay to take something that contained elderberry… People with autoimmune diseases like lupus or MS should NOT take anything containing elderberry! In healthy people it is great and stimulated the immune system, but if you have an autoimmune disease stimulating your immune system in this way can cause serious flareups! Feel free to google elderberry contraindications. Thank you!
Tom Rothsey
Wow, so many comments left unanswered, more maintenance required! It is absolutely not true that the only opportunity to recolonise the gut is the moment of birth. We can recolonise. Truly recolonise (probiotic bacterial species occupy all available niches), and yes, the protocol I have developed mimics the colonisation of the neonate gut. Don’t give up hope people, my wife and I reversed and then cleared her MS with gut healing, dietary change, and fermented food and natural antibiotic protocols. Saying we can never recolonise the gut sounds a bit like an affiliate link to me. Probiotic supplements are never needed, our food is all the medicine we need.
Aneta Saniewska
Hi, which diet did your wife follow?
MegsK
She said “gut wall” is the only location not recolonizable. Her entire diet is based upon the idea that healing and repopulating your gut is possible.
Sarah Suiter
I have MS and it is now secondary progressive. I walked with assistance 2.5 years ago. What was the diet and any supplements to help your wife. I am presently doing Terry Wahls protocol
manzarm
nice post about healing autoimmune disease.
kingsley mary
What we plan with thoughts and actions for our future so we can enjoy retirement/older age, right? Life can change drastically when a rare, incurable disease such as Systemic Scleroderma attacks our bodies without warning! My life started changing in Fall 07 in my hands, progressing fast to include weak/painful muscles, swelling, loss of range of motion and depression until 3/30/09 diagnosed with Systemic Diffuse Scleroderma which no one has ever heard of until diagnosed and adding insult to injury, neither have most doctors, leaving patients to fend for themselves on how to find treatment for symptoms because Scleroderma cannot be treated as yet. Most Scleroderma patients look normal in appearance but the damage is extensive on the inside of our bodies, stage 4 kidney disease, hiatal hernia, pulmonary fibrosis, aneurysm in heart, GI issues, skin changes and Raynaud’s in hands & feet are just a few of my Scleroderma challenges. I am one of the more functionable patients and grateful I have doctors who care and support from Sweetheart, family and friends. Some patients don’t have either doctors nor support and rely on facebook Scleroderma chat groups for advice, love and support from people who relate and understand what they are experiencing. My life has changed dramatically from 5 1/2 yrs ago and I am grateful for my Scleroderma journey because the more I reach out to others the more rewarding my life has become. I am a patient advocate helping to educate and promote public and medical awareness of the desperate need to recognise Scleroderma as the life threatening disease it is. Scleroderma was first documented 260 yrs. ago, now we want awareness to help alleviate the horrible suffering this disease causes physically, mentally and emotionally. Please help. EMILL:[email protected]
Cynthia Robinson
I totally disagree with your statement that an Autoimmune disease never gets better – it only gets worse over time. – In the midst of a very difficult case of Systemic Lupus, I did my own research, and found that mixing a solid, healthy nutrition – no preservatives, fat, salt… etc diet, added to a vitamin therapy regimen, within six months I totally reversed my prognosis of having only six months left to live to a manageable disease. Not only that, my doctors, all from Boston, U Mas Medical, Dana Farber, all said to me… Know one comes back from where you were Cindy… NO ONE! What did you do differently? I then pulled out my log of what I was taking and showed it to them… they were stunned! AND my Rheumatologist reviewed the list, wrote down what he felt I should be taking of each vitamin, and my list matched his EXACTLY! So… there is something you can do.
Cynthia Robinson
sorry for the few type-o’s miss-spellings… wanted to post, lunch hour was running out… Ooops!
Denise
She appears to mean that untreated, it never gets better. Elsewhere in the article she mentions reversal and healing.
I have had 7 autoimmune conditions for 21 years and autoimmune issues for most of my life, including lupus. I should probably be dead or in a wheelchair according to the specialists. Real foods and avoiding drugs have helped me to heal.
SCD and AIP are also very good at healing autoimmune diseases, many times they are more effective than GAPs
jim
what type of vitamin program are you on ?
Lisa
My sister has Lupus… could you share your discovered self-treatment? Especially the supplements?
Lakisha
Can you please post the list of what you used for everyone here?
danika
Hi Cynthia,
Your post was dated back in 2014 so not sure if you’ll get this but what diet did you follow to get your lupus manageable? Gaps or more like Gerson/vegan? How are you doing now?