“…The role of neuropeptides as putative neurotransmitters has become an important consideration in the study of nervous system functions. Different neuropeptides have previously been reported to exist in neurons of paravertebral and prevertebral ganglia in various mammalian species, including vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) in the pig [10,11], cat [12], newborn and young mice [13], sheep [14], rat neonates and pups [15], and humans [16]; encephalin (MEAGL) in the pig [10,11]; neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the pig [10,11], cat [12], newborn and young mice [13], sheep [14], rat neonates and pups [15], and humans [16]; substance P (SP) in the pig [10,11], cat [12], sheep [14], and humans [16]; calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the pig [10,11], cat [12], newborn and young mice [13], sheep [14], and rat neonates and pups [15]; galanin (GAL) in the newborn and very young mice [13], sheep [14], rat neonates and pups [15], and pig [17]; somatostatin (SOM) in the pig [10,11], cat [12], rat neonates and pups [15], humans [16], and newborn and young mice [18]. In this study, attention has been focused on the neurochemical characteristics of neurons in the porcine greater splanchnic nerve, because until now the porcine GSN neurons have yet not been characterized by immunohistochemistry.…”