We use essential cookies (authentication, your saved goals/stack) by default. With your permission we’ll also enable privacy-respecting analytics (Vercel Web Analytics, anonymous load-time metrics) and error-replay diagnostics (Sentry — DOM snapshots only when an error fires) so we can fix bugs faster. Learn more about cookies
Head-to-head evidence comparison — which supplement is right for you?
Bromelain vs CoQ10: CoQ10 has the stronger overall evidence (8 vs 5.5/10); they're alternatives for speed up recovery — the best pick depends on your goals. Take the 60-second quiz for a pick tailored to your goals.
CoQ10 wins 2 of 3 categories. Both are solid choices — the best pick depends on your specific goals.
Verdict
Likely helps
7 of 7 studies with measurable effects showed benefit.
Top outcomes
Verdict
Likely helps
17 of 21 studies with measurable effects showed benefit.
Top outcomes
Shared outcomes (1)
Outcomes where both Bromelain and CoQ10 have evidence — compare verdict strength side-by-side.
500-2000mg (measured in GDU — aim for 2000-3000 GDU)
On empty stomach for systemic effects, With meals for digestive effects
Capsules standardized to GDU (gelatin digesting units)
100-300mg daily
With fatty meal
Ubiquinol (reduced form)
3-7 days
1-2 weeks
3-7 days
4-12 weeks
8-12 weeks
4-8 weeks
2-8 weeks
Exploring the Therapeutic Potential of Bromelain: Applications, Benefits, and Mechanisms
Nutrients (2024) · Systematic review
It has a long history of traditional medicinal use in various cultures, particularly in Central and South America, where pineapple is native.
Bromelain as a natural anti-inflammatory drug: a systematic review
Natural product research (2025) · Systematic review
Among these compounds, bromelain is highlighted, as a cysteine protease isolated from the Ananas comosus (pineapple) stem.
Bromelain and liver health: A comprehensive systematic review of preclinical studies
Clinical nutrition ESPEN (2025) · Systematic review
Our research suggests that bromelain possesses both prophylactic and curative qualities in terms of liver damage, as supported by its ability to decrease enzyme levels, enhance liver structure, reduce oxidative stress markers, and regulate lipid metabolism.
Efficacy and Safety of Coenzyme Q10 Supplementation in the Treatment of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: a Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Reproductive sciences (Thousand Oaks, Calif.) (2023) · Meta analysis · n=1021
Only one RCT reported adverse events, and they found that patients had no adverse effects or symptoms following supplementation.
Coenzyme Q10 for heart failure
The Cochrane database of systematic reviews (2021) · Meta analysis · n=1573
Coenzyme Q10 probably reduces the risk of all-cause mortality more than control (RR 0.58, 95% CI 0.35 to 0.95; 1 study, 420 participants; number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) 13.3; moderate-quality evidence).
Antioxidants for female subfertility
The Cochrane database of systematic reviews (2017) · Meta analysis · n=6510
This suggests that among subfertile women with an expected clinical pregnancy rate of 22%, the rate among women using antioxidants would be between 27% and 33%.
Based on meta-analysis showing statistically significant but modest pain reduction (mean difference -0.27). Effect size was small and studies showed moderate heterogeneity.
Based on heart failure meta-analysis (n=1573) showing mortality reduction. Effectiveness conservative due to single primary study (n=420). Take with food to reduce GI upset. Ubiquinol forms may have better absorption.
AI-estimated from published studies. Interpret as directional guidance.
CoQ10 has a higher evidence score (8/10 vs 5.5/10) and wins in 2 of 3 categories.
For speed up recovery, Bromelain has a higher relevance score (75 vs 65).
No known interactions between Bromelain and CoQ10 have been documented in our database. However, always consult a healthcare provider before combining supplements.
The honest tier list — proven staples vs situational vs mostly marketing. The hub the other guides feed into.
Tired? Why most "energy" pills only work if they fix a deficit — and how to find yours first.
Magnesium, riboflavin, CoQ10 — the supplements with real migraine-prevention evidence (and doses).
CoQ10, zinc, selenium, carnitine modestly help sperm parameters — but live-birth evidence is weak.
The right pick depends on your goals. Answer a few quick questions for a personalised recommendation — or dig into the full evidence on each.