Short-chain fatty acids are produced in the human colon by bacterial fermentation of dietary fibers and other saccharides escaping absorption in the small bowel. Short-chain fatty acid concentrations were determined together with production rates in 6- and 24-h incubations of intestinal outputs from 56 patients with various types of intestinal resections. Concentrations and 6- and 24-h production rates in feces from 9 healthy persons (controls; median +/- SD) were 98.9 +/- 21.4 mmol/L and 17.2 +/- 5.1 and 9.3 +/- 1.5 mmol/L.h, respectively. Colectomized patients with short bowel syndrome had extremely low concentrations (0.8 mmol/L) compared with controls (p less than 10-5), patients with ileostomy (p = 0.003), and ileal reservoirs (p less than 10-5), and showed low 6- and 24-h production rates (1.5 and 0.9 mmol/L.h, respectively; p less than 10-5 vs. controls). Short-chain fatty acids in ileostomic digesta (11.1 mmol/L) were decreased (p = 0.011) compared with outputs from ileal reservoirs (51.5 mmol/L), although production rates were in the same order of magnitude--all below control values (p less than 0.001). Patients partially colectomized and patients with small bowel bypass or short bowel syndrome with preserved colon had normal fecal concentrations with decreased production rates of short-chain fatty acids vs. controls (p less than 0.01). Only minor changes in ratios between individual acids were found. Reciprocal values of short-chain fatty acid concentrations correlated to volumes of outputs from both small intestine (r = 0.86, p less than 10-6) and colon (r = 0.79, p less than 10-6) when results were cumulated. It is concluded that partial resections of colon and the small bowel do not influence the fecal concentration level of short-chain fatty acids as long as colon is not totally resected.