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
sona
Hi Sarah,
I have alopecia too. That’s my main issue along with bloating and sleepiness/brain fog. Ive been doing toe virgin diet for a week but not having sweet potato or rice since I think I may have leaky gut? I’m having dhal (yellow split peas) and making chickpea flour wraps at home, and wanted to know if this isn’t good for leaky gut? There’s a lot of contradictory info on that and taro & cassava which I wanted to eat so if you could let me know that would be great!
Kristy
Hello Sarah! I just found your website and I have hope! I have been living with Hashimoto’s hypothyroidism for the past 10 years and was then diagnosed with alopecia areata. To make a long story short, my husband was deployed for a year
and our 4 year old son started to lose hair. I don’t know if it is from the stress (as the Dr.’s say) or if he has inherited alopecia from me. I am so torn up about this as I have tried very hard to keep my family healthy e.g. no processed foods freshly extracted juices, no sugar, no vaccines. We did eat grains up to about 4 month ago, I finally realized that my son was
grain sensitive pretty much from birth. Can this GAPS diet help my son and myself. Please get back to me, I am desperate for help and I like your philosophy. I am very motivated in helping my son!!
Thank you so very much and I look so forward to hearing from you.
Kristy
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
I would recommend an evaluation by a GAPS practitioner. Biodynamicwellness.com is a good one to try .. they do phone and Skype consults.
Michelle
Hi Sarah and all bloggers! I am brand new to this site…I have just subscribed and am overwhelmed w/ excitement as I am eager to give GAPS a try! I have recently been researching about the Paleo diet and know a few people on it having great success! It’s very similar! 🙂 I am glad to know you are all here for support and I am keeping my fingers crossed that I can make this appealing at the dinner table for my family as their overall health is extremely important to me. Plus it makes it much easier if everyone’s on the same page! Thank you for all of your posts, questions and information…I have read through sooooo many and will continue as I’m not finished yet! Lol!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Welcome Michelle!
nadia
Hello Jude
I like you have RA I tried doing gaps but could not cope. You can email me on [email protected] it be nice to communicate as we both have RA
Nadia
Jude
I have been doing the GAPS intro diet for 3 weeks now. I’ve got RA. I quit taking the NSIDs, methotrexate and weekly enbrel shot 2 months ago. Now that the meds have completely left my system, I’m experiencing a lot of joint pain and have had to add 2 aleve/day. I’ve lost 15 lbs being on the GAPS intro diet of just broth and boiled chicken and am seriously afraid I’m too skinny. I have not been able to add any milk based probiotics. I add only sauerkraut juice to the broth. I consume 3 quarts of broth a day and eat an entire boiled chicken every 2 days. Can you tell me if there is something nutritive that I can add that wont harm me further and when to know I should go back on my meds to deal with the RA!
I’m seriously miserable! But I truly want to do the right thing and I do believe, after reading Dr. Campbell’s book that the GAPS diet is what I need right now! Please help!
Virginia Edward
Hello,
My only symptom, that really bothers me is s vaginal yeast infection that has been going on for months and the over-the-counter or the Dr.s prescription does not do it any good. Is this a sign that I have a really bad overgrowth of yeast, or is it something that will clear up quickly.
I am using an essential oil by Doterra called GX Assist and am on day 4 of a 10 day regimen and followed by 5 days of PB Assist, which is the probiotic. Have you heard of this and any good results with it? You do this for 3 months at the beginning of the months.
Also, are flax, chia, and hemp seed something to avoid?
Thank you from all of the sufferers on here.,
Virginia
Valtteri Kapanen
Good thing to learn those food that need to avoid in order to heal your disease.Now a days i am having difficulties on avoiding some food because of some hair problem but then hope that some organic stuff can heal it.
Kay
Do you have suggestions about the GAPS diet and heart disease dietary recommendations?Heart disease diets really push the oats and grains.
Kristina
Once I started treating my gut issues (first with Threelac and now with Threelac and GAPS) my blood pressure decreased from the high 130s to about 118. My heart rate was consistently over 100 now it is about 80. Before my cholesterol wasn’t great and my triglycerides were through the roof. Now my doctor said she is jealous of my cholesterol profile. I have now been on the full GAPS diet for 4 months. Even though I have been pushing the limits of what is diet legal, eating too much honey, drinking too much fruit juice, and not eating all the things I should I have lost 20 pounds and am slowly healing. My blood pressure and cholesterol have improved even though I am intentionally adding animal fat to my diet, eating lots of eggs, GAPS legal bacon and sausage, cooking in butter and bacon grease, drinking full fat raw milk, etc. I know I need to get serious and do the intro again, but I will probably drag my feet a little longer.