The single study provided does not investigate bee pollen as a supplement or its antioxidant properties; rather, it examines neurological receptor differences between honey bees and fruit flies in the context of neonicotinoid pesticide sensitivity, which is unrelated to the stated use case. As a result, no meaningful synthesis can be offered on the basis of the linked evidence. Readers interested in the antioxidant properties of bee pollen should consult research that directly examines bee pollen composition, bioavailability, or physiological effects in relevant biological models or human subjects. The available study does not support, refute, or otherwise inform conclusions about bee pollen for antioxidant support.
Citations from PubMed and preprint sources. Match score (0-100) reflects automated search ranking, not clinical appraisal.
| Title | Type | Year | Direction | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assessing species-specific neonicotinoid toxicity using cross-species chimeri... | Other | 2025 | Neutral | 85 |