“…In swine, T. pyogenes is a common agent of pneumonia, pleuritis, endocarditis, osteoarthritis, polyarthritis, mastitis, reproductive tract infections, and septicaemia [13,29,35,44,98,99,100,101,102]. Abscesses—superficial, muscular, or located in different organs—occur frequently, and may lead to the development of systemic purulent infection and inflammation of lungs, liver, kidneys, muscles, bones, joints, or other tissues [13,46,103]. In many cases, these are infection mixed with different microorganisms, as is observed in T. pyogenes infections in cattle.…”