“…5 The 2007-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of United States (NHANES) reported that the mean urinary Mo concentrations of both sexes in the general population range between 43.5 and 90.4 μg/g of creatinine in subjects aged 6 years and >20 years, respectively. 6 Mo toxicity has been evaluated mainly in animals and seems to be mediated by copper (Cu) concentration. 7 The main signs of Mo poisoning observed among animals are poor growth and anemia (rats, chickens, rabbits, cattle, and sheep), anorexia (rats), diarrhoea and achromotrichia (cattle and sheep), joint and bone deformities (rats, rabbits, cattle), central nervous system degeneration and loss of crimp in wool (sheep) and thyroidal injury, and hypothyroidism.…”