Thanks very much [Indiscernible]. Welcome to the Q4 2023 financial results call. Clearly, there will be some forward-looking statements. But I would characterize 2023 as a very good year. And a few of the highlights, much of which has been communicated, but revenue of $482 million, which was a 37% total revenue growth, 890 basis points of adjusted EBITDA expansion, 40% surgical revenue growth was a broad contribution, 31% surgical volume growth versus 25% in 2022, which suggest acceleration, greater than 500 surgeons trained, and a lot of work really in three key areas, which is beginning with lateral, we launched LTP with the ALIF Midline element. We launched expandables in lateral. From an informatic perspective, EOS has really expanded from a developmental perspective and look forward to talking a little bit about that. We also acquired a navigate-enabled robotic system from an informatic perspective. And from the capital raise, raised $150 million. So, I would say a very productive year. To put it in context, we've gone from about 1% market share to probably a little north of 5%, depending upon how you calculate it. Again, I think that the interesting elements are the growth rate of 40% over that period from an annual growth rate perspective -- a compound annual growth rate perspective, 17% new surgeon CAGR, a 24% procedural volume CAGR. So, people are doing work with us. And then a revenue per case CAGR of 12% and I'll get into that as well because I think it's such a buy into our surgical thesis. Our priorities have not changed and really what we're committed to is earnings share through clinical distinction. And it's interesting, we've been talking about this since 2018, but surgeons adopt technology when there's a reason to -- when there's clinical distinction, we attract salespeople when there is clinical distinction. And so our enthusiasm for that continues. Our opportunity to really kind of initiate the company's resurrection, if you will, was around how do you create clinical distinction. And there's such an expertise within lateral here, that's what we did. And so we've gone from about 1% to about 12% share in lateral. And the ability for us to continue to improve the utility and expand its application is very apparent. And so we're doing that through really fulfilling the surgical requirements and addressing hurdles within the procedure itself. We're integrating SafeOp to avoid the complication which most associated with lateral surgery, which really speaks to the whole automated SSEP element, which you don't even -- you don't only determine where the nerve is, but also its health. And then one of the other elements was when we created PTP, really what we were able to do was obviate the need to approach from posteriorly with PLIF and TLIF. And so what the essence of that becomes is a lateral franchise that addresses really a $3 billion market opportunity versus what was previously a $1 billion market opportunity. So, we love that because one of the things that it does is it furthers confidence. So, if we do lateral surgery exceedingly well, what we find is that we have access to a greater part of the surgeon's practice. We call that the halo effect. And so if one of our salespeople executes with a surgeon, a lateral approach in either the Pro or the lateral position, what happens is we often earn trust. And that trust ultimately expands the footprint of what type of surgery we do with that respective surgeon. We've continued to commit to approximately eight to 10 products per year. This was a big year for us at 15. And we always look for product launches to ultimately expand the influence of our procedures. And if you look kind of across each of the areas from a lateral standpoint, the expandables was a big one. The other thing that I love that we do is really we establish a foundation for what's next. We launched some products in lateral for thoracic. We will prepare for thoracic corpectomy as well as we launched an LTP position. We applied our learnings from what we knew in PTP and applied it to LTP, which is lateral transpsoas. From an anterior perspective, access is hugely important to surgeons. We developed an access system for ALIF and ultimately, that's going to integrate with regard to the procedural vision of elsewhere to S1 with regard to LTP. So, super excited about that from a posterior perspective. Expandables was a big part of our launch profile this year as well as some tools for stabilization in osteoporotic bone. That's important as it starts to lay the foundation for where we're going on the EOS front with regard to bone quality measure. From a cervical standpoint, there's been significant demand of our cervical portfolio. I would say that's reflective of the halo dynamic that we speak of as well as SafeOp too and our biologics portfolio. It's fun to see not only continue to launch a demineralized bone fiber product, but also start to see the integration of our biologics within the context of our expandables. And so when you have an expandable device and you expand it what you want to do is backfill it with biologic and to integrate these steps into a workflow that's elegant is part of our proceduralization view. And so when you start to think about how we garner more surgeons, the surgeon adoption effort is really multifaceted. And so we can tell more surgeons because of the clinical distinction, and then we earn more of their cases based upon the confidence it created with their experience. And then the more products category sold in each case is really, in my mind, a buy into the procedural architecture or the thesis that we put forth. And so certain procedures are going to have less products per procedure, other surgeries are going to have more products per procedure. But we think it's a good proxy for what we're doing with regard to the whole proceduralization effort. So, distinction doesn't only compel adoption by the surgeon, but it also attracts salespeople. And so we think that it's continually important to further our distinction. And so elevating our distribution network is going to be a constant priority. You will continue to see us do that. As we said earlier, we earned an approximate 5% market share. The inspiring thing for us is that in places where we've had distribution in a place that has a number of people within their distributor network, there's places that we have 25% market share. And that just speaks to the application of our portfolio into an expanded utility as well as the confidence of the people in that respective area. We've really never been more enthusiastic with regard to the status of the marketplace in general. We internally characterize it as 35% disrupted and 60% apathetic. And I don't know if there's a better place to be when you are sprinting at moving a field than a market that's disruptive in apathetic. And so one that would suggest that there is good things happening would be that -- we have a 36% same-store sales dynamic. And that means that there's a growth rate that clearly far exceeds anybody else from a same-store perspective. And so when people come here, their ability to build a big business is significant. So, the beauty is that we are attracting people who want to play along, for those committed to moving the field. Surely not that one's interested in a single year experience or a single year guarantee. We're in this for the long haul, and I can't be more excited about what we're building. When you start to think about our place in the market and our portfolio as we speak, if we wanted to build a good company, we would have stopped right here and we have built a lateral franchise and candidly, could have been done. It's really what we did at the last company. Our aspirations are much greater and we genuinely want to revolutionize the approach to spine surgery, which we've committed to. So, much like we built the first part of the company around the informatic element of SafeOp and performing better lateral surgery, we're doing the same here with regard to deformity. And so started off building it with the people. Clearly, it's always about the people, acquired SafeOp, built a lateral franchise. And I think you're seeing the same thing happen again with regard to EOS. And so we can't be more excited about that. And so the value of our informatics set is that it creates an ecosystem. What we've seen is we've seen silos of information and I think they're less valuable than when you have the opportunity to combine elements and it is the proceduralization not only mechanically, but informatically, it's really proceduralization on steroids, the ability to assemble these goods to ultimately improve not only the interoperative element, but the predictive nature of what we're trying to do from an improvement of spine care perspective. Several years ago, I said that the Spine business needs ATEC, and I have never believed it more. And I think that you could look here and if you think the scientist settled, when you have a 10% to 15% revision rate within one to three years in short-segment surgery, and 25 to 30 in two to five years in deformity surgery, I think you're kidding yourself. And so well being in an area where clearly the spine science isn't settled. And I think there's a very clear requirement for spine to have an objective informatic ecosystem. And I think an interesting place to look really is that what we're doing here with regard to EOS. And if you look at the box in the lower left-hand corner, that's what most surgeons see. They see a very focal view. And I think when you pull out and you start to see a more global view, you can see how a limited view really starts to mislead the surgeon. And so one of the beauties of the EOS Insight is that it's going to provide you automation where at this point, it's alignment measured by hand calculation, which is hugely time-consuming and it requires software that's candidly not very friendly from a workflow perspective. And so when you start to think about spine surgery as being decompression, stabilization and alignment. And alignment is the greatest correlative to a long-term successful durable outcome and you look back at what the revision rates are with regard to fine surge, you start to say, gosh, there's a heck of an opportunity to bring objective information into an environment. And so if science needs to become more settled than it needs to become more settled with data, and there's not a better source of data than the tool that informs pre-intra and post-op that's completely aligned with surgical goals. Back to the surgical goals of decompression and stipulation alignment, you love that you have a tool that ultimately informs your automated alignment reports, automated surgical planning, prevent rod, intraoperative alignment reconciliation, and assessment and follow-up. So, if it is the data that will provide a pre-intra and post-informatics that will ultimately really just provide a richer ecosystem of information. It is it is very, very straightforward, I think, to be inspired by how it's going to influence deformity. And data and informatics informs better surgery. Clearly, our opportunity in deformity is apparent and so in the image respective of an idiopathic deformity, you can see the value that understanding the rotational deformity has with the assembly of the procedure, with the assembly of an understanding of neurologically what's going on, where it gets the assembly of the parts that ultimately plays a role. And so the opportunity within deformity is very clear and I think it's reflective of the type of demand that ultimately was demonstrated here a few weeks ago at our First Annual Deformity Summit. We had 30-plus deformity thought leaders across the field, join us in Carlsbad for the first one and could not be more excited about the understanding and appreciation of the tools that ultimately will reflect the sophistication within the field. And so when you start to think about really a unique dynamic that sits in a 5% market share holders band is an ecosystem that informs not only the preoperative element in terms of who to operate on and why, but also the intraoperative element, which enables a procedural understanding of not only informatic needs but also the mechanical needs in a workflow that ultimately begets predictability and then informing that again with regard to the post-op information that comes from the exact same image that was taken for the pre-op and the plan. So, great year in 2023. Clearly, there's momentum, but the beauty is what's in front of us. And so we will continue to expand our lateral sophistication with regard to new products and broader and deeper sales footprint. We're literally just, I think, starting off in international had a decent year in Australia and New