We report cytogenetic and molecular investigations performed in two cases of mosaic trisomy 8 combined with mosaic sex chromosome aneuploidy. In a 35-year-old female, presenting with short stature, gonadal dysgenesis, and a multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome typical of trisomy 8, chromosome analysis from peripheral lymphocytes showed the presence of three cell lines, whose karyotypes were 45,X (59.2%), 46,X,+8 (1.2%), and 47,XX,+8 (39.6%), respectively. The same cell lines were found in a skin fibroblast culture, though in different proportions. The second patient, a 9-month-old male with multiple skeletal abnormalities, showed a 47,XY,+8 and a 47,XXY cell line in both peripheral lymphocytes (61.7% and 38.3%, respectively) and skin fibroblasts (92.8% and 7.2%, respectively). To determine the events underlying the origin of these complex karyotypes we performed Southern blot and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis using polymorphic DNA markers from the X chromosome and from chromosome 8. Both supernumerary chromosomes 8, and, in case 2, the two X chromosomes, appeared to be identical, lacking detectable recombination events. We conclude that, in both cases, the most likely mechanism underlying the origin of the mosaic cell lines was formation of a normal zygote, followed by mitotic errors during early divisions.