The globus pallidus (Latin for "pale body") or pallidum (Terminologia anatomica since it is not even globoid) is a sub-cortical structure in the brain. It is a major element of the basal ganglia system. It is a major element of the basal ganglia core made of the striatum and its direct targets: pallidum and nigra. In primates, the globus pallidus is divided into two parts by the medial medullary lamina. These are termed the internal and external segments of the globus pallidus (medial and lateral pallidum), and they are two of the major nuclei of the basal ganglia. Both pallidal nuclei are made up of the same neuronal components. Almost all neurons in primates are very large, parvalbumin positive, with very large dendritic arborizations. These have the particularity of having the three dimensional shape of flat discs, parallel to one other, parallel to the border of the pallidum and perpendicular to the afferent striatopallidal axons (Percheron et al. 1984).There are only a few small local circuitry neurons. The globus pallidus is traversed by numerous myelinated nerve fibres that give it the pale appearance for which it is named. The two pallidal nuclei and the two nigral (lateralis and reticulata) constitute a high frequency pacemaker (Surmeier et al. 2005, see primate basal ganglia system)
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