Respiration-induced B0 fluctuations are significantly greater in the cervical spinal cord than in the brain at 7T, increasing k-space phase inconsistencies and necessitating a separate evaluation of autocalibration scan (ACS) methods for accelerated EPI. We tested four ACS methods (single-shot EPI, segmented EPI, FLEET, and GRE) under three physiological conditions (end-expiration breath-hold, free-breathing, and intentional swallowing). GRE and single-shot EPI ACS methods, which are robust to respiration-induced phase errors between k-space segments, produce images with fewer and less severe artifacts than either FLEET or conventionally segmented EPI ACS methods for accelerated EPI of the cervical spinal cord at 7T.
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