Bacillus pyogenes is a diploid, gram-negative, rod-shaped, non-sporulating, non-motile, strict aerobic, facultative anaerobic, acid-forming bacterium that is widespread in nature. Green-pol's bacillus, a genus of the family Bacillaceae, is pyogenic. It is the causative agent of purulent infections, such as osteomyelitis, mastitis, cholangitis and other diseases that are caused by aerobic infectious microorganisms. The bacillus is recognized as pathogenic for humans, animals and plants.
Bacteria constantly invade human tissue through penetration through damaged skin and mucous membranes. Once in the body, bacteria form polymicrobial communities inside tissue structures, provoking tissue damage, manifested by the formation of a purulent mass. As a result of the disease, healthy cells of the body are destroyed and replaced by waste products of microorganisms. Among the waste products of pathogenic organisms there are chemical compounds, toxic products, amino acids, bacterial enzymes and many others. All these properties contribute to the manifestation of a huge number of diseases caused by pathogenic microbes.
Infections are the main manifestation of the pathogenic effects of bacteria. The following pathological conditions caused by pyogenic bacilli can be distinguished: furunculosis, empyema, otitis, phlegmon, peritonitis and others. The ability of bacteria to cause inflammatory diseases of the genital organs, respiratory tract and many other structural components of human tissue is especially pronounced. It is worth noting that infection with pyogenic bacillus occurs through direct contact with an infected carrier of the microbe, through the food alimentary method or through airborne transmission. The infection rapidly spreads through the human bloodstream, breaking the blood-brain barrier. Microbes settle on bones, cartilage, tissues and organs, and a complex of metabiotic changes develops that occur when pathogenic microorganisms enter the body. Lack of treatment leads to the need for septic intervention to remove foci of infection.