For Gastroenterologists
Your SIBO Patients Forget What They Ate by Tuesday.
GLP1Gut is a free symptom tracker built for SIBO. Patients log meals, rate their bloat, and the app finds their triggers. You get better data at follow-up.
Send to a Patient
Give your patients something better than a blank food diary.
Send them a free app that takes 60 seconds per meal, tracks bloat scores, and surfaces triggers before their next visit.
Why This Page Exists
SIBO patients need to track more than calories. They need to connect what they eat to how they feel, across days and weeks, in a way that produces data you can actually use. Most of them try a spreadsheet or a generic food diary app and give up within a week.
GLP1Gut is a free iOS app built specifically for this. Patients snap a photo of their meal, rate their bloat, and the app logs ingredients and tracks patterns over time. After a week or two, triggers start surfacing. After a month, they have a map you can plan around.
This page is here so you can share that tool with your patients in one tap, and read articles written for your practice, not theirs. The content below covers the workflow problems gastroenterologists actually deal with when managing SIBO.
Articles for Your Practice
Written for practitioners, not patients. Each one covers a real workflow problem and what you can do about it.
When Antibiotics Stop Working: Patterns That Suggest Treating the Wrong Thing
Recognize when SIBO antibiotic failure signals a wrong diagnosis. Clinical patterns for gastroenterologists to identify alternative causes of persistent symptoms.
Screening for ARFID and Food-Fear Patterns Before Prescribing Restrictive Diets
Screen SIBO patients for ARFID and disordered eating before prescribing restrictive diets. Practical guidance for gastroenterologists to avoid harm.
When the Breath Test Is Equivocal: Using Symptom Trajectory to Decide
Navigate equivocal SIBO breath test results using symptom trajectory data. Clinical decision strategies for gastroenterologists facing borderline results.
Why Your Patients Abandon the Low-FODMAP Reintroduction Phase
Most SIBO patients never complete low-FODMAP reintroduction. Understand why patients abandon this phase and how gastroenterologists can improve adherence.
Coordinating Care with Functional Medicine and Nutrition Without Duplicating Work
Coordinate SIBO care between gastroenterology, functional medicine, and nutrition providers. Reduce duplication and conflicting recommendations for better outcomes.
Supporting Patients Through the "I Feel Worse Before Better" Phase
Help SIBO patients manage symptom worsening during treatment. Evidence-based guidance on die-off reactions and Herxheimer-like responses for gastroenterologists.
Distinguishing IBS-Like Symptoms from SIBO Without Over-Testing
Evidence-based approach to differentiating IBS from SIBO without excessive testing. Clinical decision frameworks for gastroenterologists managing overlap cases.
The Motility-SIBO Feedback Loop: Helping Patients Understand Meal Spacing
Teach SIBO patients why meal spacing matters for migrating motor complex function. Practical patient education strategies for gastroenterologists.
Getting Objective Data from Patients Who Minimize or Catastrophize
Strategies for collecting reliable symptom data from SIBO patients who minimize or catastrophize. Practical approaches for gastroenterologists to improve assessment.
The PPI-SIBO Connection: Evaluating Deprescribing Candidates
Evaluate PPI deprescribing in SIBO patients. Evidence-based framework for gastroenterologists to identify candidates and manage acid suppression withdrawal safely.
Reducing No-Value Follow-Up Visits Through Pre-Visit Symptom Data
Use pre-visit symptom data to eliminate low-value SIBO follow-ups. Practical workflow strategies for gastroenterology practices managing chronic GI patients.
Combining Pharmaceutical and Non-Pharmaceutical Prokinetics: Monitoring Response
Monitor prokinetic response in SIBO patients using pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical agents. Evidence-based combination strategies for gastroenterologists.
Red Flag Symptoms Hidden Inside Routine SIBO Follow-Ups
Identify red flag symptoms that may be hidden in routine SIBO follow-ups. Critical screening checklist for gastroenterologists managing chronic SIBO patients.
When to Re-Test vs. Treat Empirically with Longitudinal Symptom Data
Decide when to re-test vs. treat empirically in SIBO recurrence using longitudinal symptom data. A clinical decision framework for gastroenterologists.
Documenting SIBO for Rifaximin Prior Authorization
Step-by-step documentation strategies for rifaximin prior authorization in SIBO cases. Improve approval rates with proper clinical evidence formatting.
The 15-Minute SIBO Follow-Up: Making Limited Appointment Time Productive
Maximize 15-minute SIBO follow-up appointments with structured workflows. Evidence-based strategies for efficient gastroenterology visit management.
Why Your SIBO Patients Can't Tell You What Happened Last Tuesday
SIBO patients struggle with symptom recall accuracy. Learn evidence-based strategies to capture reliable patient data between gastroenterology visits.
Post-Treatment Monitoring: Catching the 40-60% Recurrence Window Earlier
Monitor SIBO recurrence effectively after treatment. Evidence-based strategies for detecting relapse in the 40-60% recurrence window for gastroenterologists.
Hydrogen vs. Methane vs. Hydrogen Sulfide: Communicating Subtype Differences
How to explain SIBO subtypes to patients. Practical communication strategies for hydrogen, methane, and hydrogen sulfide SIBO in gastroenterology practice.
Differentiating SIBO Recurrence from Small Intestinal Fungal Overgrowth
Distinguish SIBO recurrence from SIFO in patients with returning symptoms. Clinical features and diagnostic approach for gastroenterologists managing overlap.
Send to a Patient
Your Next Follow-Up Could Start with Actual Data
Instead of 'I think the bloating was a little better,' your patient walks in with two weeks of timestamped meals, bloat scores, and a trigger list. Pick the easiest way to send them the app.
Disclaimer: The articles on this page are for informational and educational purposes only. They do not constitute medical advice and should not replace clinical judgment. GLP1Gut is a patient-facing symptom tracking tool, not a medical device.