In the course of neurosurgical interventions in 40 patients with parkinsonism and torsion muscle dystonia, the background activity (BA) was recorded from 124 neurons of the ventrolateral nucleus (VL) of the thalamus with the aid of microelectrodes during demarcation of boundaries between nuclear structures, and identification of zones within a nucleus. The following characteristic features of the BA in patients with parkinsonism were found: a relatively large proportion (71%) of cells with a burst pattern of activity; a great diversity of burst duration in the activity (short or prolonged bursts); a large proportion (67%) of cells with cyclic changes in the BA frequency; diverse patterns of cyclic modulation, where periods varied from fractions of a second (0.2–0.8 sec) to seconds (2–10 sec) or to tens of seconds (20–40 sec); cyclic successions of spike bursts with the rhythm typical of the peripheral tremor (3–7/sec) in a substantial proportion (40%) of the units.