Good morning, everyone. I'm pleased with our recent announcement that we have dosed the first participant since the restart of our ReMEDy2 trial. Enrolling the first participant is particularly challenging and a crucial milestone when coming off the clinical hold for a safety event. Although the hypotension we previously observed with the inadvertent higher dose was transient and resolved quickly, and despite the results of our Phase Ic trial clearly demonstrating that the appropriate IV dose of DM199 does not cause hypotension, we recognize there is often some reluctance to be the first to enroll on restart. The feedback from the investigator who dosed this participant was very positive with no observed hypotension. However, we do not know whether the participant received drug or placebo. Success begets success, and we are optimistic that other investigators will have a similar positive safety experience dosing their first participant with DM199, encouraging them to enroll more participants. I want to emphasize that these stroke patients have no treatment alternative and are not eligible to receive any standard of care treatment, either TPA or mechanical thrombectomy. Investigators want to see a future where every patient has a treatment option. So as we accrue more safety data, we expect momentum to build quickly. From discussions with sites, we believe a key inflection point will be enrolling the first 10 participants, to them, this represents a meaningful sample size. We will keep our active sites abreast of our participant enrollment, and in the future, we will also send out a monthly newsletter in an attempt to facilitate some friendly competition between study sites. Now let me discuss some specifics of site activation. We currently have 8 sites activated. 2 of these sites are large sites, the University of Pennsylvania associated with our National Principal Investigator, Dr. Scott Kasner, and Tampa General Hospital, a major stroke center. In activating these 2 sites, we learned of a common software coordination issue, which we had to work through to enable the processing of pharmacy orders through the individual sites investigational drug management platform. We worked closely with these 2 sites to resolve the issue, and both are now positioned to screen for potential participants. We are actively working closely with all other sites in the queue for site activation to avoid similar delays and ensure that their internal systems like their pharmacy investigational drug management platform are fully operational prior to site activation, so they can immediately begin screening participants without interruption. This is just one example of how we apply best practices learned from experience to enhance operations at all sites going forward. While we are slightly behind our short-term activation targets, we still anticipate that the majority of sites will be activated this year with a major bolus of U.S. sites in Q2 and Q3. With the current level of interest from high-quality stroke sites, we are considering increasing the target number of U.S. sites beyond the 40 initially planned. The key is now focusing only on quality sites that are considered high enrollers. Importantly, many of the largest U.S. stroke enrolling hospitals are now in the start-up stage and are working to join our trial in the coming months. These sites have been major contributors to recent stroke trials, which is encouraging for our study. We anticipate that their involvement could also drive competition among study sites and also contribute to a higher per site enrollment rate. We also believe their endorsement speaks to the potential of DM199 and in particular, our differentiated mechanism of action of selectively increasing cerebral blood flow. Outside of the U.S., things are progressing well. In Canada, with official support from the Canadian Stroke Consortium, we have identified 6 quality sites and are finalizing our regulatory submissions for Health Canada. We expect a response around the end of June. The Australian Stroke Alliance has recently provided its formal endorsement of our protocol, and we are in the process of selecting study sites and initiating regulatory filing activities. We plan to work with many of the same highly engaged centers we work with in our ReMEDy1 trial as well as new sites recommended by the network. I am also excited to report that we continue to strengthen our clinical operations team. Earlier this year, we announced the addition of Rebekah Fries as our VP of Clinical Operations. This is the third company at which Rebekah has joined me to execute on clinical trials. Rebekah initially joined DiaMedica as a consultant in January and has already made substantial progress in streamlining our operations, both internally and externally with our multiple vendors, which we believe will lead to momentum building and site activation. The additional experienced clinical operations personnel mentioned earlier also previously worked with both Rebekah and I at 2 prior companies. These are important additions to support our global expansion of the trial. I will now turn the call back over to Rick.