Thank you, Paul. Hello, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter conference call. I'm joined this morning by Scott Kellen, our Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin this morning, I want to take a moment to welcome Dr. Richard Kuntz to our Board of Directors. Dr. Kuntz recently retired from Medtronic, where he was the Chief Medical Officer, Chief Scientific Officer and a member of the Executive Committee. Prior to that, he served as a Senior Vice President and President, Neuromodulation at Medtronic. Before Medtronic, he was the Founder and Chief Scientific Officer of the Harvard Clinical Research Institute in Boston. He also served as an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Chief of the Division of Clinical Biometrics and as an Interventional Cardiologist in the division of cardiovascular diseases at the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. He also served as an adviser to multiple national and regional committees in the National Academy of Medicine and National Institutes of Health. Dr. Kuntz has directed numerous multi-center clinical trials and has authored over 200 original publications. We are grateful to have Rick join our Board. His experience complements and broadens the knowledge and skill set of our Board. Turning back to our update. The second quarter saw two important milestones for DiaMedica and our shareholders: The FDA's lifting of the clinical hold on our ReMEDy2 stroke trial and the completion of an at-the-market financing, raising gross proceeds of $37.5 million. Starting with the FDA. On June 21, we announced that the FDA had fully lifted the clinical hold on our ReMEDy2 Phase 2/3 clinical trial, studying DM199 as a treatment for acute ischemic stroke or AIS. With this decision, we immediately reengaged with our study support vendors and have selected a new contract research organization with strong current experience in the stroke space. As many of you know, there's a great deal of work involved with preparing for a pivotal registrational clinical trial. I can assure everyone that our entire team is excited and focused on working with our CRO, supporting vendors and key advisors for the resumption of the trial. Recall that we have a bit of leg up as we have approximately a dozen sites already under contract from last year. Additionally, we are now also evaluating the addition of clinical sites outside of the US to increase our enrollment rate in countries viewed as being able to enroll more quickly than their US counterparts. Our goal is to deliver a complete and clean clinical data package to the FDA at the conclusion of the ReMEDy2 trial, enabling the FDA to accept and improve DM199. It has been with this objective in mind that we expanded our clinical team over the past year. As of today, all key vendors have been engaged and are actively pursuing preparations for the resumption of patient enrollment. The estimated timeline has not yet been finalized. But based upon discussions with our CRO and multiple others, we are optimistic that enrollment for the interim analysis can be completed before the end of 2024. The final timing will come down to the actual pace of enrollment. I want to stress that with our recent capital raise, which brought in significantly more capital than anticipated, we are able to pursue expanding the study globally in order to increase the enrollment rate with the intent to ultimately reach both the interim and final analysis more quickly. We expect to be able to provide more clarity on the overall timeline at our Q3 earnings call. On a related note, and as we've previously discussed, we are conducting a Phase 1C open-label, single-ascending IV dose study of DM199 in healthy volunteers using the same PVC IV bags as in the ReMEDy2 trial. The first part of the study demonstrated the safety of our planned 0.5 microgram per kg IV dose level to be used going forward in the ReMEDy2 trial. It also demonstrated that this dose level achieved our targeted KLK1 blood concentration level, a level that we believe is the desired therapeutic range, similar to our prior Phase 2 stroke trial and the reported drug levels of the human urine-derived KLK1 protein widely used in China under the product name kallikrein. We were able to report today that we also completed a fourth cohort in the Phase 1C study, consisting of three hypertensive patients on ACE inhibitors. These patients received the 0.5 microgram per kg dose using the updated methods planned for the ReMEDy2 trial. We are pleased to see that all participants received the full IV dose and there were no instances of hypotension or large drops in blood pressure. We believe that the additional clinical data from these combined results will provide further assurance to current and potential physician investigators that the correct IV dose level has been identified and patients, including ACE patients may be safely enrolled in the ReMEDy2 trial. Turning to our second milestone. We also significantly strengthened our balance sheet during the past quarter. In June, we completed an offering of straight common shares, no warrant coverage priced at the market. Gross proceeds from the offering were $37.5 million and net proceeds were $36.1 million, bringing our cash balance to over $60 million at the end of the quarter. The financing was led by existing investors who contributed a significant portion of this capital raise and remain enthusiastic about DM199 and its potential to offer a compelling new treatment option for stroke patients. We also had excellent participation from our management team and Board who collectively invested $700,000. We are grateful to our investors who have put us in a position where we believe we can now drive our destiny. We believe that we now have the sufficient capital enabling us to complete the interim analysis with the remaining cash runway of approximately one year. We focus on the interim analysis. It has the potential to signal a beneficial impact of DM199 to stroke patients, a patient set that has not seen a significant therapeutic development in over 25 years since the approval of tPA. Before I turn the call over to Scott, I also want to call your attention to a new video and slide in our corporate deck that we had created, which further illustrates the DM199 mechanism of action as it applies to stroke patients, specifically, DM199's role in increasing collateral circulation. The key updated mechanism message is that in response to ischemic conditions caused by a stroke, the bradykinin 2 receptors expressed on endothelial cells in the arteries of the brain are highly upregulated locally in the ischemic penumbra. This increase may be by as much as 40-fold higher based upon testing in animal models. By augmenting with DM199, we believe a significantly greater number of the upregulated bradykinin 2 receptors may be activated, causing the beneficial focal basal dilation in the affected area of the brain, the ischemic penumbra, to increase blood flow and oxygen. We believe this improved collateral circulation will salvage brain tissue in the penumbra and lead to improved patient outcomes. This video can be found on our website at www.diamedica.com and scrolling down to the front page to the section titled Advancing Patient Care with Innovative Treatments. I would like to now turn the call to Scott Kellen to review the financial highlights.