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Mosaicism is when a person has two or more genetically different sets of cells in their body. Chromosomes are stick-shaped structures in the middle of each cell in the body. Each cell has 46 chromosomes. They are grouped in 23 pairs. A person with mosaicism may have some cells in their body with 46 chromosomes. But other cells may have a different number of chromosomes. This can cause health problems.
Mosaicism may be caused by an error in mitosis. Mitosis is the dividing of body cells. It's how a fetus develops during pregnancy. Mitosis causes the number of chromosomes to double to 92 and then split in half back to 46. This process repeats constantly. Mitosis also continues throughout your lifetime. It replaces skin cells, blood cells, and other types of cells that are damaged or naturally die.
If there is an error in mitosis, a cell doesn't split evenly into two cells. The result is that some cells have the normal number of 46 chromosomes and other cells have more (47) or fewer (45) chromosomes.
Mosaicism can be linked to many different kinds of disorders, such as: