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Benefits

Microbiome Support

Improved Digestion

Liver Support
Benefits

Microbiome Support

Improved Digestion

Balance Electrolytes
Benefits

Microbiome Support

Improved Digestion

Maintains PH Balance
Good Health Starts In The Gut
Which Butyrate is right for me?

Calcium Magnesium

Sodium Potassium

Sodium
What role does Butyrate play in my body?
• Reduces Inflammation*
• Stabilizes the microbiome*
• Reduces our desire to overeat*
• Burns fat*
• Helps the body target and eliminate unhealthy cells*
• Cleans your cells*
• Stimulates the burning of abnormal fatty acids*
• Create an environment where cancer cells are not given the conditions they need to thrive*
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Top Customer Questions
Q: Why do you use butyric acid?
A: BodyBio’s butyrates are simply butyrate, a thirteen-atom complex joined to an alkali. Butyric acid, butyrate and tributyrin are ingredients you may see in this category of supplements. Same purpose, different characteristics. We use butyric acid aka butanoic acid, a short chain fatty acid with four carbon atoms at its heart (found in butter, hence its name). As an acid, it has a low pH so we compound it with an alkali, a combination that forms a salt + water. At this stage, we no longer have butyric acid, but butyrate, a buffered form of butyric acid.
Q: Is Butyrate enterically coated? How do I know it makes it to the gut?
A: The capsules of sodium butyrate are vegetarian, made from plant cellulose. The butyrate powder within is enterically coated. Because butyrate has systemic benefits, some must then be absorbed in the upper GI tract. What people look for is to get butyrate to the colon. Here, an approach has been devised to tackle the challenge of butyrate delivery—coating with a vegetable fat, commonly cited as a medium-chain triglyceride. The rationale behind this is that a significant part of the butyrate will be released only when lipase is secreted in the duodenum.
Top Customer Questions
Q: Why do you use butyric acid?
A: BodyBio’s butyrates are simply butyrate, a thirteen-atom complex joined to an alkali. Butyric acid, butyrate and tributyrin are ingredients you may see in this category of supplements. Same purpose, different characteristics. We use butyric acid aka butanoic acid, a short chain fatty acid with four carbon atoms at its heart (found in butter, hence its name). As an acid, it has a low pH so we compound it with an alkali, a combination that forms a salt + water. At this stage, we no longer have butyric acid, but butyrate, a buffered form of butyric acid.
Q: Is Butyrate enterically coated? How do I know it makes it to the gut?
A: The capsules of sodium butyrate are vegetarian, made from plant cellulose. The butyrate powder within is enterically coated. Because butyrate has systemic benefits, some must then be absorbed in the upper GI tract. What people look for is to get butyrate to the colon. Here, an approach has been devised to tackle the challenge of butyrate delivery—coating with a vegetable fat, commonly cited as a medium-chain triglyceride. The rationale behind this is that a significant part of the butyrate will be released only when lipase is secreted in the duodenum.
Top Customer Questions
Q: Why do you use butyric acid?
A: BodyBio’s butyrates are simply butyrate, a thirteen-atom complex joined to an alkali. Butyric acid, butyrate and tributyrin are ingredients you may see in this category of supplements. Same purpose, different characteristics. We use butyric acid aka butanoic acid, a short chain fatty acid with four carbon atoms at its heart (found in butter, hence its name). As an acid, it has a low pH so we compound it with an alkali, a combination that forms a salt + water. At this stage, we no longer have butyric acid, but butyrate, a buffered form of butyric acid.
Q: Is Butyrate enterically coated? How do I know it makes it to the gut?
A: The capsules of sodium butyrate are vegetarian, made from plant cellulose. The butyrate powder within is enterically coated. Because butyrate has systemic benefits, some must then be absorbed in the upper GI tract. What people look for is to get butyrate to the colon. Here, an approach has been devised to tackle the challenge of butyrate delivery—coating with a vegetable fat, commonly cited as a medium-chain triglyceride. The rationale behind this is that a significant part of the butyrate will be released only when lipase is secreted in the duodenum.