Few pharmaceutical studies, with the exception of those on rectal solutions, are described on short chain fatty acid (SCFA) formulations-especially for sodium butyrate, which is a colonocyte preferential substrate. Highly dosed butyrate pellets (90%) were prepared and their coating was designed for colonic delivery. In vivo determination (pH and transit time of pellets in rats) allowed to respectively choose the grade and thickness (resistance of 6 h) of the pH-dependent coating (Eudragi L+S, 1:1). The coated pellets were administered to naturally butyrate-deprived rats. The rats' colonic mucosa had the particularity to weakly express mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase, an enzyme that responds to luminal butyrate. The results did not show early absorption of butyrate, but a probable cecal loss in the rat cecum as cecal residence time of the pellets was important and as pH was propitious for the coating hydrolysis. It seemed that butyrate, given daily for 7 days without the other main SCFA. was unable to induce the enzyme and/or that the dose (0.32 mmol/day) was insufficient.