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Stuck on the Low FODMAP Diet?

Many of my IBS and SIBO patients come in after months or years on the low FODMAP diet. Don’t worry- It is 100% possible to safely add these foods back into your diet if you play your cards just right! I’ve coached many folks through this process before.


More often than not, the low FODMAP diet is prescribed for IBS without any discussion on how to resume normal life afterward. So what do you do when you find yourself stuck on this grueling diet?

First, some vocab-

Problems with the long-term use of the low FODMAP diet:

 

What to do?

Being stuck on the low FODMAP diet is a catch-22 of awfulness. Eat this way and never feel normal again, or go off the diet and bloat so much you look 8.5 months pregnant. If your gut can’t tolerate these foods, you’re just doomed, right? Wrong.

If you break your leg and need a crutch, it’s not practical for me to say “just don’t use the crutch.” You need that crutch until you heal your leg! Similarly, low FODMAP can be seen as a crutch for IBS and SIBO in the first few weeks of treatment. If you need it for a while, that’s OK. If you become dependent on this diet, then you likely need some professional help. I can’t say that it’s easy or cheap to heal your body and walk without this crutch, but it can be done. Below are a few important things to address to heal your gut and get off the low FODMAP diet- they are in approximate order of importance.

Things to address with your healthcare team:

  1. (Properly/thoroughly) treating SIBO and/or dysbiosis (consider a good stool test)

  2. Digestion- stomach acid, enzymes, bile, etc

  3. Immune system health/strength

    1. Also, other infections that can stress the immune system (like EBV)

  4. Thyroid function (testing more than just TSH and T4!)

  5. Motility/MMC/Vagus nerve function

  6. Inflammation and autoimmunity

Lastly, you’ll want a good plan before diving in- don’t approach this process willy-nilly. Before you reintroduce a food you should check off all of the above, and make a list of what you’re going to reintroduce and when.

Wishing you the fluffiest of poops,

But wait. What does the low FODMAP diet actually look like? What foods should you be adding and subtracting from your diet? Let me know where to send them (below) and I’ll send you my handy guides:

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