Kelly The Kitchen Kop

Autism, ADD, ADHD, constipation, candida, asthma, learning / behavioral problems & depression – Natasha Campbell-McBride: Gut and Psychology Syndrome

September 16, 2008 · 26 comments

I was very excited to hear Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride speak at Saturday’s Deidre Currie Festival. It seems that everywhere I turn I hear more about her work these days, and it all makes so much sense. Following is the information from my notes at the talk.

First, if you just need the GAPS recommended probiotics, the GAPS book, or other resources, you can go to this GAPS resources post.

Do “quick fixes” really heal, or just treat the symptoms for a while?

First of all, she doesn’t propose that her diet is an easy or quick fix. Real solutions rarely are. Instead she teaches how to help conditions that have stumped doctors for years, such as ADD, ADHD, learning/behavior/social problems, autism, depression, reflux, constipation and other digestive issues, and many others – she said it sometimes takes up to two years or more on this diet. Until now, the only treatment was aimed at the symptoms, and there weren’t whole body evaluations or any lasting help. The answers only involved more medications and side effects.

A little background information

photo by Cheeseslave

Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride worked as a neurologist and neurosurgeon in Russia, and now lives in England. At the age of three, her son was diagnosed as severely autistic. “Having looked at his profound digestive abnormalities, I found that my own profession had nothing to offer my own child. He is now fifteen years old and cured. That was a fateful event in my life and what it took to knock this doctor out of the mainstream. Every medical doctor I have met who has ‘moved to our side’ has had something like this happen to a loved one.”

I just bought this book by Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride: Gut & Psychology Syndrome, and was surprised at the cost – but I looked and couldn’t find it cheaper anywhere else. Yet I suppose when you think of all the answers inside and what it could mean for families, it’s actually pretty inexpensive.

WHAT IS GAPS SYNDROME?

  • In children it can be diagnosed as: autism, ADHD/ADD, dyslexia, dyspraxia, and the largest group are those with these three: learning, behavior, & social problems.
  • Unless something drastic and serious is done to help the above children, they become adults with these problems: more prone to substance abuse (and higher chances of reacting adversely to drugs), depression, obsessive/compulsive disorder, manic-depressive, and schizophrenia.
  • The numbers are growing, and it can maim the lives of not only these children and adults, but of whole families for the rest of their lives. The medical community doesn’t offer any cures; all that is offered is symptomatic treatments.
  • In a clinical setting, one feature unites all these problems: THEY ALL HAVE DIGESTIVE PROBLEMALITIES.
  • In chidren, digestive issues are usually the first symptom. Sometimes they are severe, but other times they’re not so severe and you only find out later, after talking more about their history, that they have these problems.
  • Sometimes GAPS patients have allergies, asthma & eczema (those two usually alternate), thrush, or chronic cystitis (bladder infection) – have you ever heard of a doctor who would ask them about any digestive problems when they show up with these symptoms?
  • Chronic Cystitis: through the urine is how toxins are moved out of our body. If they build up in the blood instead, it causes chronic inflammation and symptoms of cystitis. They test the urine but don’t find an infection, so they don’t know how to help.
  • Thrush/yeast overgrowth in the vagina or any sweaty, warm places. A healthy body is populated by beneficial flora that live in harmony with us in the skin, mucus membranes, vagina, bladder, urethra, everywhere in the body. But if you’ve been on a lot of antibiotics, if there are environmental toxins, stress, a bad diet, or all these things, your body flora changes. Good bacteria are gone and it opens the gate for pathogens. The first thing you might see is often candida and other yeasts that cause thrush.
  • If your body is well equipped, yeast can’t settle in your body and cause harm. If it has already settled and started causing problems, it is an alarm bell that your immune system is not working properly. This is the time to make drastic changes.
  • Some GAPS children suffer from malnutrition, but may look well nourished. When tested we find multiple nutritional deficiencies. Others look like African children: they are too skinny, with bulging tummies.
  • GAPS patients often have colic, bloating/gas (as a colicky baby grows it becomes indigestion and heartburn – in a baby it was called reflux), diarrhea, or constipation – which is more severe than diarrhea because toxins sit inside there a long time and then get into the bloodstream.
  • Feeding difficulties are universally present in these patients. They are finicky eaters. (Siblings of autistic children are almost universally picky eaters, too.) Their bodies learn that food makes them ill so they limit the foods they’ll eat to the very foods that harm them most – sweet, starchy foods, sweet yogurts, bananas. When the toxins absorb they give the brain a pleasure signal, so the brain wants more and they become drug addicts in a way.
  • The trouble is that when you tell them about changing the diet, a lot of parents ask, “how do I change my child’s eating habits, they will gag and not eat any of this!” In my GAPS book there is a whole chapter, a structured approach, on how to change a finicky child’s diet graduallyyou have to pull them out of the vicious cycle of cravings and dependency. They will fight you every step, but you have to help pull them out. One child lived on crackers and they took them to a dietician who said, “it’s ok, at least he’s eating.” He looked like he was from Ethiopia. After 2 months of following the GAPS diet he was eating everything, but the parents have to be determined and strong.
  • In some patients we’ll discover in an x-ray that there is a fecal compaction with over-spill and inflammation, similar to what you see with Crohns or Colitis, due to multiple nutritional deficiencies. This is when the digestive track is blocked with old compacted feces that are literally glued to the gut wall. It is not completely emptied when they go, so the passage is narrow, and then more gets compacted. It becomes so narrow, food can hardly seep through. When the child finally goes to the bathroom it is so painful, they are afraid to go again.
  • In our gut (our intestinal tract), there are many beneficial microbes; they have established a symbiotic relationship with our bodies. 90% of all cells in our body are gut flora – we are a shell to hold this massive amount of bacteria – our health depends hugely on the health and status of this mixture of bacteria.
  • The gut flora protects it from invaders, maintains the health and integrity of the gut, provides digestion and absorption, vitamin production, detoxification, and a healthy immune system.
  • GAPS patients have what’s called Gut Dysbiosis or “leaky gut” They have reduced or absent populations of normal flora.
  • The digestive track all spread out would cover a tennis court, and it’s the perfect place for anything harmful in the environment to settle, yet the good bacteria there chelate (remove) chemicals and toxic metals – if they can’t destroy it, they grab and it take it from the body.
  • Two groups of rats were given organic mercury. One group were given a powerful antibiotic, the other group were not. The mercury got into the bloodstream of only about 1% of those without the antibiotic, and 90% of those with the antibiotic. Keep gut flora healthy and strong and it can protect you. (When antibiotics are taken they wipe out bad bacteria AND beneficial bacteria.)
  • The government says we should limit our fish consumption due to mercury in the ocean, but yet those who do NOT limit it are in better health (because it promotes healthy gut flora). If you have healthy solid gut flora, it will chelate the mercury and take it out.
  • Apart from insuring that food is digested properly, good gut flora also takes part in synthesizing B vitamins – our main source is our gut flora. If someone is pale and pasty it usually can be due to vitamin B deficiencies – no matter how many supplements they take, they are still deficient.
  • First thing that has to be done: detoxification. Digestion itself (environmental, etc.)produces dangerous chemicals, nitrates, etc. With beneficial gut flora, the toxins it can’t change are taken out.
  • Chemical Chelation can be dramatic and cause regression – it pulls mercury or lead out of storage cells (fatty tissue – the brain & nervous system are mostly fat) – she recommends no chelation because a healthy gut is the better way (chelation pulls out good stuff, too).
  • If gut flora is compromised, the body tries to compensate and this results in allergies, asthma, and inappropriate reaction to environmental toxins. Even if you were never allergic before, and then allergies begin, soon they’ll slide down to being allergic to everything.
  • 85% of the immune system is located in the gut wall.
  • GAPS Patients & Gut Dysbiosis: reduced/absent populations of normal flora, candida species overgrowth, clostridia species, sulphate reducing bacteria (most are deficient in sulfur as it’s necessary to detoxify), viruses (measles, herpes, cmv, etc.)
  • A study done in Britain shows clostridia in higher amounts in autistic children than the rest of the population. Antibiotics work, but you can’t be on them forever. Only way to fight it is the natural way – with gut flora.
  • Birth Control Pill has a devastating effect on gut health, as well as overuse of personal care products on skin & hair and in the mouth.
  • Almost 100% of Moms with GAPS children have abnormal gut flora.
  • Most autism begins when nursing stops.
  • Vaccinations were developed for healthy children with healthy immune systems, but most are not fit to be vaccinated. She doesn’t feel these are a direct cause with autism, but it seems to have become a “last straw” in these cases where the gut flora is on the tipping point.

How to help this condition

“It isn’t hopeless, we’ve treated these children for years with good results.”

  1. Diet (specific carb diet – more on this in the book above) can greatly help these conditions (often misdiagnosed as gluten issues/celiac disease – only about 5% of these conditions qualify as true celiac disease – 17% of true celiacs don’t do well on gluten-free diet.)
  2. Effective probiotics are crucial. Regular fermented foods or probiotics are good, but a stronger probiotic with more organisms may be more helpful for more serious issues.  Be sure to use with care and read up on the right amounts.  (A “die-off” reaction is common.)  Later probiotic supplements can be gradually reduced and replaced by fermented foods.
  3. Address nutritional deficiencies – Dr. Campbell-McBride is not in favor of a lot of supplements – nutrition is always best from healthy food. The diet is so nutrient dense that it removes most nutritional deficiencies quickly. She doesn’t recommend a multi-vitamin, in late stages maybe, but not in initial stages. Fish oils are essential from the beginning – for fat soluble vitamins & omega 3’s – more here on why cod liver oil is so beneficial.
  4. Detoxification is an important part of the treatment process – “I believe in natural detoxification, in using our own digestive system. More than 80% of anything harmful in your blood is from your own digestive system. That’s why keeping it healthy is so vital to us.  In GAPS patients, nutrients don’t get absorbed. We all have our own detox system responsible for removing toxins that come from the outside or from the gut. The system can get overloaded, like a traffic jam. TWO METHODS: A. The liver gets clogged, so it is recommended that parents introduce juicing – a time proven method of removing all sorts of toxins from the body. Start gradually, 1/3 c. (kids 1 t.) a day to start, in case of a severe die off. This is very effective – juicing provides substances to pull toxins out of storage, but will also provide live enzymes and fatty acids. B. Baths with Epsom or Sea salt, and cider vinegar – alternate those two. This pulls toxins from the skin while the child is happily playing in the tub.”
  5. “Your toxic load needs to be reduced – your exposure to man-made chemicals. Re-think everything used in the home, or for personal care. All can be toxic and are absorbed through the skin and end up at the liver.”
  6. Supplementation – probiotics (see above for more info) & cod liver oil (for vitamin A, D, & fatty acids), digestive enzymes (not for everyone, these are not needed for children – they can restore them on their own easier.)

Many more details on all this are in her book above.

Check out the Natural Cures for Depression blog carnival!

HAS ANYONE TRIED THE GAPS DIET? IF SO, PLEASE COMMENT BELOW AND TELL US ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCE!

Check out the new KITCHEN KOP REAL FOOD INGREDIENT GUIDE: only $5!

DON'T MISS NEW POSTS:

Subscribe in a reader
or Subscribe via e-mail for free blog updates.


Learn more from the COMMENTS BELOW - join the conversation!

{ 2 trackbacks }

Swim Your Way Out of Depression | Hartke Is Online!
07.14.09 at 10:28 am
The GAPS Diet: What It Is and Why You Might Consider Doing It | Keeper of the Home
02.22.10 at 6:02 am

{ 24 comments… read them below or add one }

1

Anonymous 09.17.08 at 6:22 am

I was told last week that my son has this. We are preparing to start the GAPS diet right now. I’ll let you know how it goes. Were waiting for the probiotics and the book in the mail right now. And I’m preparing chicken stock and throwing out everything in our kitchen. The doctor I went to said the diet is basically avoiding dissacharides (double sugars) all grains, everything processed and dairy at first. There are some things on the dissacharide list you wouldn’t expect so you really need a list (potatoes, corn, garbanzo beans, soy, rice, etc)

Thanks for posting this!! Let’s get the word out there.

[Reply]

2

Katy 09.17.08 at 7:09 am

I saw Dr. NCM at the Wise Traditions conference in Nov ‘07 and put my then 4-year-old daughter on the diet in January of this year. She has multiple food allergies, dark circles under the eyes and a bloated tummy. Seems to be having some progress but I believe we have a long way to go. I have just started the diet myself as well as I know my gut flora is completely out of balance. We have a support group in the Triangle area of North Carolina for folks on or interested in GAPS. We also have a WAPF board member / health practitioner who recommends the GAPS diet to patients – Ken Morehead of Oriental Health Solutions. So we have a good support network here. I know of several people who are witnessing lots of detox and improvement in health from just a few weeks on this dietary protocol.

It looks like from your notes that Dr. NCM gave about the same presentation she did at Wise Traditions last year. I actually have a downloadable MP3 recording of her presentation that should go along with your notes. It is free to distribute. http://www.greekgiftsetc.com/GAPS/
I do not know how long I will be keeping this domain open as I’m closing the business that uses this domain, but you are welcome to download and listen to the 2 presentations (one about GAPS in general, one about the treatment plan), as long as I have this domain up and running.

I can’t wait to see Dr. NCM again at the Wise Traditions conference in San Francisco. She will having an entire day workshop on GAPS there. I hope to get lots of burning questions answered.

Thanks Kelly for posting her notes. I’m forwarding a link to your blog to several others.

[Reply]

3

Katy 09.17.08 at 7:18 am

I forgot to mention that there are two yahoogroups which support GAPS:

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/GAPShelp/

and

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/healingleakygut/

[Reply]

4

Janis 09.18.08 at 11:08 am

Katey, thanks so much for posting the recording of Dr NCM. I have bought and read Gut and Psychology Syndrome, but listening to her speak clarifies so much! Thank you, thank you!

[Reply]

5

a kelly 09.18.08 at 10:56 pm

I have tried the specific carbohydrate diet…life is better when I stick to it but it is a challenge to always be prepared in every situation. Going “off” is always disaster and leads to the return of all the problems. Reading this gives me a renewed sense of encouragement! It helps to know that others are trying also.
Many thanks!

[Reply]

6

Kelly the Kitchen Kop 09.19.08 at 10:37 am

I’ll bet those Yahoo groups are a HUGE support, which is probably the only way you could hang in there on a diet like this.

All of you who are fighting the fight – way to go! Even though it is not easy, you must feel good knowing you are doing something to TRULY heal. :)

Kelly

[Reply]

7

Megan 09.24.08 at 4:03 am

Thank you so much for this article. It simplifies the confusing world of GAPS. I would love to post a link to this on my blog. Is that ok?

[Reply]

8

Kelly the Kitchen Kop 09.24.08 at 4:37 am

I always appreciate links to my blog – thanks Megan!

[Reply]

9

Debbie H. 09.25.08 at 3:48 pm

Thank you Katy for the MP3 download on Dr. NCM. This article has been fantastic. Do you have Dr. NCM’s website?

[Reply]

10

Kelly the Kitchen Kop 09.28.08 at 7:47 pm

Debbie,

I added some good links at the end of the post above.

Kelly

[Reply]

11

KINDELAN 05.04.09 at 9:33 pm

Dear Kelly,
I have watched Dr. McBride’s DVD, read her book in part but now I’m going back to page one and read each chapter. My son is a Cardio/thoracic surgeon, my daughter-in-law is a Gastroenterologist and they are educated to diagnose, and alter organs with sharp instruments, etc. or prescribe drugs. It’s frightening. Nutrition, alternative medicine, not a chance, not now anyway. They’re both young and may eventually ’see the light.’ I’ve been studying nutrition for a number of years, but nobody yet has focused my mind in such a positive and sure way as Dr. McBride. I’ve read Nutrition and Degenerative Diseases, Nourishing Traditions, and about 45 others, and this is the first book that makes complete sense. I have always thrown down each book and realized, maybe, maybe not. However, like Rachel Carson when she came out with the truth about pesticides in her book, Silent Spring, Dr. McBride may get some flak. If she does there is going to be an enormous number of people come to her defense. She is a beautiful woman, and I love her as many others do I’m sure, but when you’re entire income comes from traditional medicine, and many autism organizations exist, an actual cure might be like a cure for diabetes and what it means to the ADA, they still recommend foods that will make matters worse, not better. I hope they are dedicated and would like nothing more than to see the disease eliminated. If you go to the Mayo Clinic, nearly all the diseases that Dr. McBride, and while alive, Elaine Gottshall, cured, the Mayo Clinic says there is no cure. Medicine is the biggest racket on earth if one includes the drug companies, food companies and chemical companies. Doctors are caught between a rock and a hard place. The AMA sees those who break from the herd as anathema to the modern medicine machine. Truth would be a wonderfully refreshing dynamic, but the politicians, established old boy networks, etc., would go nuts, they’d get hit men to assassinate character because they’re basically stupid and insane as I believe anyone who would put profits first and the health of our nation second has to be sociopathic, and sociopaths are indeed nuts. If I, personally, sound like a revolutionary, I assure you it runs in the family. My great uncle was instrumental in an attempt to assassinate Franco of Spain, he fled to France and they called him, Franco and his band of cutthroats, a coward. It takes but to plan and attempt an assassination of a dictator. If he’d been successful he was to have a place, or the place, in the Spanish government. Our clan has devout Communists in Cuba, Doctors, playwrights, artists, professors, and athletes in America, but if any is more radical than me, I would like to meet them, we’d have quite a lot in common. The system needs massive change, and it’s intelligent women and men who do their homework and leave nothing stated without verification and what could be more verifying than cured patients. I’m glad to see you’re impressed by Dr. McBride, and anyone with any sense can’t help but be, but there’s so many without any sense, it must be their gut is misfiring, and that may be partly true. I loved her Genetics chapter on page 229, it’s the stuff I’ve been shouting like an out of control maniac for years having been poisoned by arsenate (lead-arsenic insecticide) when I was four years old. To experience that I always knew what close to dying was like, it comes back into my life a thousand times, but there is always the upside, I feel relieved when I wake up for one more day. If that sounds grotesque, I assure you, what’s grotesque is when you’re four years old and can’t urinate for 2.5 days and when arriving at the hospital they start to insert a steel (no plastic then) catheter into your urinary tract. Now that is grotesque, but I passed out and woke up three days later. I was highly out of sorts when I finally woke up and found my sheets were wet, rumpled and clinging to me and I said to the nurse, “I want to go home where my mother has clean sheets.” Some of the women laughed and some of them cried. (I was a boy in the women’s ward because my screaming when I passed out went on for hours I was told and the men were ready to throttle me so they moved me in the women’s ward, thank goodness for women.) I was a very pretty boy and well formed and though it is unfair, it seems we root more for beauty than we do for the ordinary. That launched my beginnings in becoming a revolutionary with definitive complaints. I don’t have one book in me, I have a couple dozen but I doubt if I’ll ever write one, it’s too painful. Keep up your good work and promoting truth, good health, and good people. I find those who do so are of the same character.

Sincerely, R. Kindelan

[Reply]

12

Kelly 05.09.09 at 10:23 pm

Hi R., thanks for the thoughtful comment. The more I learn about the GAPS diet, the more I believe it can HEAL – getting people to buy into it is tricky, though.

We’re swimming upstream for sure, but we’re making headway! :)

Kelly

[Reply]

13

KT 06.02.09 at 11:43 am

Just came across your website by googling constipation and learning problems. I wonder if they are linked. I found so much information through your post. Thank you. It’s helpful. I have a 9 year old son who has struggled with constipation from the time I stopped nursing him at 6 months. Interesting that that was mentioned. He was colicky too. That was mentioned! He’s an A & B student but in reading it’s a c-. He also got a D in Social Studies the first trimester. Then I realized 3rd grade is not easy. He requires a lot of study time and a lot of one on one time. Has trouble with vocabulary and comprehension. I have an appointment with a Doctor that does things a new way. He has seen the light, as you stated. Enough of the laxatives. Let’s work with what is really going on. I don’t know if the two things that I stated are linked. But if not, he needs to be regular. Which even I am not. And if his learning is something else, I will deal with that too, separate from the bowel issues.

[Reply]

14

Kelly 06.05.09 at 12:24 am

KT, so are you thinking of doing the GAPS diet??????
Kelly

[Reply]

15

Rachel 06.18.09 at 8:16 am

Would anyone be able to explain to me what the difference is between the GAPS diet and the anti-candida diet?

Rachel’s last blog post..In progress

[Reply]

16

Kelly 06.19.09 at 10:25 am

Rachel, hopefully someone else who knows more will jump in, but if not, you’ll probably just need to start googling for info on both. I’m guessing that the GAPS diet is the anti-candida diet with more components.
Sorry I’m not any help!
Kelly

[Reply]

17

Lanise 07.22.09 at 1:35 pm

I’ve just started changing our diet and lifestyle within the last couple of months. Once I get my head around all of these changes I would like to explore GAPS. My husband has ADD and is on mess and my 7 yr and 4 yr old appear to be going down the same path behavior wise. My question is should I wait until I am done breastfeeding before I start GAPS? I’ve heard that it very detoxifying and that’s not good when you are breastfeeding. Thanks so much.

[Reply]

18

Kelly 07.22.09 at 4:13 pm

Lanise, I don’t know the answer to that, but I know where you can find out (and I should’ve suggested this to earlier commenters asking various questions, too): the Yahoo Gaps Support Group – http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/GAPShelp/join

Good luck, and let us know back here what you find out, if you wouldn’t mind. Thanks!
Kelly

[Reply]

19

Candida Die Off Symptoms 07.23.09 at 1:02 am

Great indeed – thanks for the nice article.

[Reply]

20

jenna 08.19.09 at 5:32 pm

interesting. i’m curious though about the statement that “vaccines are made for kids with healthy immune systems” and that these illnesses occur because there are too many toxins in the body. why do very young children have too many toxins? are their guts dysfunctional at birth, or are they able to have too many toxins built up already by 1-2yrs when autistic symptoms start? i guess my question is why are some bodies able to handle grains, dairy etc. and others not??

[Reply]

21

KitchenKop 08.20.09 at 12:18 am

Jenna, according to Dr. McBride (in talks I’ve heard from her), it has a lot to do with the health of the mother while the baby was in-utero.

Kelly

[Reply]

22

Rene 02.10.10 at 7:03 pm

My daughter was just diagnosed with asthma. We are starting this diet tomorrow. I had already used Nourishing Traditions and whole foods, but I will be starting from the introductory phase and moving forward. Thank you so much for this post! I do have one question. Is this a lifestyle change that will last forever, or are we able to introduce grains back in after several weeks/months? I do soak my grains to cook my bread, first, but I know to avoid them on this diet. Thanks again for this great post! I am so encouraged, and can’t wait to get started!

[Reply]

23

mill 02.10.10 at 7:07 pm

sounds cool i think i have so i will haft to try it out!

[Reply]

24

KitchenKop 02.10.10 at 8:05 pm

Hi Rene,

Be sure to look over all my other posts on the GAPS Diet, too, as there are many good links and other info that will help you. (Including a link to a Yahoo support group that will be a much needed resource for you.)

From what I’ve heard, once your daughter’s gut is healed and her asthma is better (or gone!), you most likely will be able to SLOWLY add things back in and see how it goes. I think I read “two years” somewhere, so it may be a long haul. Others have good results much sooner, though. Just be assured that you are a GREAT Mom to be willing to do this hard work for your daughter’s health!

[Reply]

Leave a Comment

You can use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Older post:

Newer post:

Clicky Web Analytics