What the study found
The article concludes that different imaging methods have distinct roles in spinal tuberculosis, or Pott’s disease, with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) described as the gold standard and plain radiographs often detecting disease only later. It also notes that newer techniques can help with earlier detection, diagnosis, and response assessment.
What the authors say this matters
The authors state that the review is useful for radiologists and clinicians managing spinal tuberculosis because it summarizes imaging features, protocols, biopsy approaches, and healing markers. The study suggests this may support clearer and more standardized communication.
What the researchers tested
This article is a comprehensive radiologic review of imaging modalities used in the diagnosis and management of spinal tuberculosis. It discusses plain radiographs, computed tomography (CT), MRI, dual-energy CT, positron emission tomography-CT (PET-CT), and whole-body diffusion-weighted imaging with whole-body screening.
What worked and what didn't
Plain radiographs are described as a baseline tool but usually detect disease only in later stages. CT can show bone destruction, abscess calcifications, and help guide biopsies; MRI is reported to have high sensitivity and specificity for marrow edema, skip lesions, paraspinal and epidural abscesses, and neural involvement, especially with contrast-enhanced, diffusion-weighted, and coronal sequences. Dual-energy CT may help distinguish spinal infections from osteolytic metastases, and PET-CT plus whole-body diffusion-weighted imaging can further improve lesion characterization and response assessment.
What to keep in mind
This summary is based on a review article rather than a primary study of patient outcomes. The abstract does not provide detailed limitations of the review itself, and it does not report quantitative performance values for the imaging methods.
Key points
- MRI is described as the gold standard imaging method for spinal tuberculosis.
- Plain radiographs are noted as a baseline tool that often detects disease only in later stages.
- CT can show bone destruction, abscess calcifications, and support image-guided biopsy.
- Dual-energy CT may help distinguish spinal infections from osteolytic metastases.
- PET-CT and whole-body diffusion-weighted imaging are described as helpful for lesion characterization and response assessment.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Review outlines imaging roles in spinal tuberculosis
- Authors:
- Sandeep Velicheti, Manasa Mayukha Hanumanthu, Pravallika Prasanna Godaba, Sriya Vanjavakam, Phalgun Venkata Madala, Raghu Teja Sadineni
- Institutions:
- Siddhartha Medical College
- Publication date:
- 2026-03-30
- OpenAlex record:
- View
Get the weekly research newsletter
Stay current with peer-reviewed research without reading academic papers — one filtered digest, every Friday.


