“…The indiscriminate and excessive use of pesticides, especially the common ones in Egypt such as malathion in the developing villages, causes many problems that directly negatively affect human health and indirectly through animal byproducts that humans feed on, even those that are frozen for long periods (Hassouba, M. et al, 2007). Even at low dosages, persistent malathion exposure is frequently associated with severe hepatic, renal, and testes problems in laboratory animals (Badr, 2020;Omar et al, 2022a), due to it has been demonstrated that malathion intoxication increases oxidative stress as a result of excessive production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and exhaustion of the body's natural antioxidant defense system, which interact with biomolecules to cause lipid peroxidation, numerous biochemical inactivation, and DNA damage (Ibrahim et al, 2020). (EL ASUOTY, M.S et al, 2017) reported that farm animals eating feed and grains exposed to malathion can transfer it to milk and its derivatives.…”