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MOLYBDENUM (Mo)
General - trace mineral; detox mineral;
- Adult body contains about 9 mg;
- History: essentiality for humans established in 1953;
Nutrition
- Sources: best: lentils, liver, peas, cauliflower, brewer’s yeast, wheat germ, spinach; good: kidney,
garlic, whole grains, eggs, fish, sunflower seeds; poor: refined foods, foods grown on
molybdenum-deficient soils;
- Supplements: molybdenum salts, amino acid chelates, multi-mineral, multi-mineral-vitamin
formulations;
- Absorbed readily from stomach & upper small intestine; 25 to 80% of ingested molybdenum is
absorbed;
- Antagonized by: removed from foods during refining;
- Storage: mainly in liver & kidneys; adrenal glands, bones & skin;
- Excretion: through kidneys; rapidly turned over;
- Metabolism: works with fluoride; high copper intake increases molybdenum excretion; high
sulphates increase molybdenum excretion;
- Interactions: high molybdenum results in high urinary losses of copper; tungsten is antagonist to
molybdenum metabolism;
Functions of molybdenum
- As co-factor of an enzyme (xanthine oxidase), molybdenum is involved in mobilizing iron from liver storage to oxidize aldehydes;
- Helps to remove nitrogen waste from the body through the formation of uric acid (purine
metabolism); uric acid is a powerful anti-oxidant; molybdenum appears to play role in control of
aging;
- Detoxifies one class of food preservatives (sulphating agents) by means of
molybdenumcontaining enzyme (sulphite oxidase); sulphites can cause nausea, diarrhoea, acute
asthma, coma & death in sensitive individuals; bisulphite destroys vitamin B-1;
- Involved in fat metabolism & energy production through molybdenum-activated enzyme
(aldehyde oxidase);
- Catalyzes reactions that transfer an oxygen atom from water to various compounds; simultaneous
exchange reactions: give up 2 electrons at one end of molecule + cause 2 protons to be given up at
other end of molecule;
- Powerful agent for reducing copper levels;
- Protects against cancer of the stomach and oesophagus; protects (rats) against chemical
carcinogens;
- May decrease incidence of tooth decay by promoting retention of fluoride;
- Increases muscle tone;
Quantities
- Measurement: micrograms;
- Optimum: (SONA) average ranges not yet established;
- Individual optimum needs to be determined for each individual case;
- Minimum: (DRI) 45 μg/day; (50 μg/day during pregnancy.
- Less than RDA: not yet known;
- Deficiency of molybdenum from inadequate intake, genetic condition, high copper, high sulphur;
- Symptoms may include: increased susceptibility to dental caries; inadequate uric acid production;
impaired sexual functioning, especially in older men; maybe gout; cancer of oesophagus (due to
nitrosamine formation);
- Intolerance to sulphur-containing amino acids, resulting in fast heartbeat, increased breathing rate,
visual problems & coma;
- (Animals) elevated mortality in mother & offspring; elevated copper levels in liver & brain;
defective sulphur (cysteine) metabolism;
- Toxicity: molybdenum is relatively non-toxic; unusually high intake required to produce
symptoms;
- May cause diarrhoea, depressed growth, anaemia (failure of red blood cells to mature); symptoms
identical to those of copper deficiency;
- Very high intake (10 - 15 mg/day, which is very difficult to achieve) may alter uric acid
metabolism, producing gout;
Therapy with molybdenum
- Relieve molybdenum deficiency;
- Balance & ameliorate the toxicity of excess copper;
- May play part in preventing anaemia;
- May prevent dental caries;
- May prevent oesophageal cancer;
- May be helpful in male impotence in later years;
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