Degenère-Sokes-Sicocard syndrome is one of the most unusual motor control disorders that results in a person's inability to control their hand gestures. This syndrome was first described in 1904 by French neurologists Jean Djedrin, Andreos A. Souhas and Joseph-Albert Sicard. One of the symptoms of this pathology is the inability to control the movements of the arms, which move large muscles - biceps and triceps. In fact, if you want to take an object, a person cannot do it accurately and accurately - the hand moves precisely in the form of a “knot” and makes subtle movements. The second manifestation of the syndrome is the inability to hold a light toy or any small object. Incredibly, even in severe cases, several cases have been recorded in psychiatric hospitals where people have shown interest in dolls with various defects that help them control themselves and move their arms. There is an incredible feeling that they are obeying the mangets and that in this way they control their body.