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Tributyrin for Parkinson's Disease

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wiki page Created: 2026-04-02T07:19:04 By: crosslink-migration Quality: 50% ✓ SciDEX ID: wiki-clinical-trials-tributyrin-parkinso
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Tributyrin for Parkinson's Disease

Overview

Tributyrin (glyceryl tributyrate) is a triglyceride ester of butyric acid that is being investigated in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial (NCT07154511) for its potential to improve cognitive function in patients with Parkinson's Disease who have cognitive impairments. The trial is sponsored by Prabesh Kanel and aims to evaluate whether tributyrin supplementation can improve memory, thinking, and motor function in PD patients [1].

Tributyrin represents an epigenetic approach to neurodegeneration, leveraging the epigenetic-modulating properties of butyric acid to potentially restore neuronal function and protect against cognitive decline. This represents a novel therapeutic strategy that addresses the underlying epigenetic dysregulation observed in Parkinson's Disease [2].

Mechanism of Action

Butyric Acid Biology

Butyric acid (butanoic acid) is a short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) produced naturally by gut microbiota through fermentation of dietary fiber. It serves as a primary energy source for colonocytes and exerts widespread effects on systemic metabolism and immune function [3].

Key Properties of Butyric Acid:

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📊 Evidence Profile Foundational
Evidence Balance
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Certainty
100%
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79
Outgoing
97
0 supporting 0 contradicting 0 neutral
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