Thanks, Rick. Today, I would like to start off by covering the recent updates to the ReMEDy2 protocol and statistical analysis plan. I will be referencing slides displayed on your screen for our web-based listeners. These slides were also filed with the SEC in a Form 8-K last night. I joined DiaMedica in late January of this year and I couldn't be more excited about the opportunity. It quickly became clear that we needed to transform the medical organization and bring clinical site-facing activities back to DiaMedica because we were not getting acceptable results from our contract research organization. I am very pleased with our progress and we'll share more details about this momentarily. With that transition underway, the next area of attention that we brought to focus was the trial design and statistical analysis plan. If you reference Slide 2 of the presentation, we've implemented a series of updates and further clarifications to the ReMEDy2 protocol which we believe are very positive for our trial. These updates were submitted to the FDA at the end of August. And as we have received no comments as of yesterday, we are implementing the new protocol modifications. The 2 primary updates to discuss are the inclusion of patients who did not respond to thrombolytic therapy that is treatment with thrombolytics that is activator or tenecteplase and the increase of the interim analysis sample size from 144 to 200 participants which dramatically enhances the power of the Bayesian simulation used to forecast the total required sample size and therefore improves the precision of and confidence in the final sample size determination for the trial. I'll discuss each in detail but know that these changes will help us achieve the following outcomes. Number one, accelerate per site enrollment rates. In previewing these changes with the clinical sites, their reaction is that with the inclusion of thrombolytic non-responders, they can potentially increase their enrollment significantly, some sites indicated as much as 50% to 100%. Number two, adding thrombolytic non-responders is expected to improve our overall response rate compared to placebo. This patient group exhibited the highest response rate of any subgroup in our ReMEDy1 Phase II study. I'll discuss further but as we reanalyzed our data, we wanted to include these potentially great patients to increase the probability of success for the ReMEDy2 trial; and number three, with trials using an adaptive design structure, the interim analysis needs to be based upon a number of participants that is large enough to optimize the precision of the estimated final sample size in order to avoid unnecessarily enrolling excess participants. Collectively, we believe the protocol updates are expected to be very positive for our study sites should increase the probability of success for the ReMEDy2 trial and accelerate our time line to completion. This change may take an additional 4 to 6 months to get to the interim enrollment but it's important that the increased sample size has the potential to reduce the final sample size which can lead to a shorter overall study time line and substantial cost savings. I want to be emphatically clear that we would not have made these changes if there was any belief or concern that they would cause even the slightest degradation in quality or efficacy of the trial. I emphasize this as I've been developing drugs for 30 years and watched numerous trials fail due to expanding inclusion criteria to boost enrollment. Turning to Slide 3. Let me go into more detail. When examining our data from the ReMEDy1 Phase II trial, we found that the majority of participants pretreated with tPA received DM199 late in the 24-hour treatment window. Surprisingly, although these patients could have been enrolled as soon as 1 hour after tPA was administered, on average, they were enrolled 13.5 hours after tPA was administered. This is important as it is well established that thrombolytics have a very short half-life, approximately 24 minutes and are therefore cleared from the body rapidly. These agents undergo 7 half-lives in less than 3 hours and are effectively cleared from the patient's system 3 hours after dosing. So if a patient is presenting with persistent moderate to severe stroke severity, several hours after tPA is cleared from the patient system, it indicates that thrombolytics didn't meaningfully correct the neurological deficit. We colloquially refer to this type of patient as a tPA or thrombolytic non-responder, we want to capture this type of patient because we anticipate they will have a low placebo response rate and there is potential for a significant treatment effect when compared with DM199 therapy. On the right side of the slide, you can see the data from our ReMEDy1 study in participants treated with tPA prior to enrollment. As you can see in the placebo group, the response rate was 0 which we believe affirms that these participants were tPA non-responders. Conversely, in the DM199 arm, the response rate was 25%, this 25% improvement versus placebo was actually the highest performance improvement among all subgroups studied in the ReMEDy1 trial. I also want to note that the primary reason we didn't initially include tPA non-responders in the ReMEDy2 study initially was to the significant difference in outcomes based upon how soon after a stroke the patient receives tPA. Those receiving tPA at 1 hour post stroke have been shown to do much better than those receiving tPA 4 hours post stroke. At the time, DiaMedica didn't want to introduce this potential variability into the study and the clinical risk of an imbalance of tPA patients in favor of the placebo arm. However, upon considering the ReMEDy1 results, if we properly define the thrombolytic non-responder, I believe that we can eliminate this variability risk. Turning to Slide 4; here are the details of the inclusion criteria related to tPA non-responders. We spent countless hours with our scientific advisory board and leading vascular neurologists who consult for DiaMedica to properly define the inclusion criteria which are listed on this slide. After discussions with our Scientific Advisory Board and stroke neurologists in our trial, we believe the best time to assess when a patient is a non-responder is 6 hours after thrombolytics have been administered. If you intervene earlier, for example, at 4 hours, there is a greater risk that the patient is a delayed responder. If you wait until hour 12, there is a risk of more brain tissue dying from the impaired blood flow. We think 6 hours strikes the right balance and recall in our prior ReMEDy1 study, DM199 was administered on average, 13.5 hours after tPA. If we can actually get to patients more quickly, we have the potential to improve upon the treatment effects we already saw in the ReMEDy1 trial. The second point that I want to emphasize is that at or after that 6-hour mark, the patient must be re-evaluated. The neurological deficit must be persistent and fall within the same stroke severity range as non-tPA patients meaning an NIHSS score between 5 and 15. And when we say persistent neurological deficit, we mean that the patient cannot have experienced a 4-point or better improvement in their NIHSS score following thrombolytic treatment. We do not want patients to still fall within the NIHSS range but are on a trajectory to recover. And finally, the patient must be rescanned to rule out worsening as a result of any hemorrhagic transformation that may have been caused by the tPA and the patient must meet all other criteria as non-tPA patients for example, being treated within the same 24-hour window from stroke symptom onset. With this new criterion, we think we've struck the right balance to include a patient population with a significant unmet need and that we anticipate will respond favorably to DM199. Turning to Slide 5. The other key update relates to the size of the interim analysis. Over the past 20 years, I've worked extensively with several leaders in statistical analysis for my studies, whom I've had review our statistical analysis plan. Based upon the feedback and the potential reduction in the overall trial sample size, we made the decision to perform the interim analysis after enrolling 200 patients, an increase from the previously planned 144 participants. Here on Slide 6 is a very potent demonstration of why we don't want to be undersized at the interim analysis. This is an actual simulation from the model comparing final sample size estimates based upon enrolling 144 and 200 patients at interim. For trial integrity purposes, we can't disclose the actual treatment response and placebo response. But in the example provided, the values are identical and the only difference is the interim sample size. As you can see in this scenario at 144 participants, the sample size re-estimate is 485 participants, whereas at 200 is 339 participants. I want to reiterate this is an actual simulation in the model driving our statistical analysis plan. From a cost standpoint, this kind of difference could translate into a savings for DiaMedica of $10 million or more. We believe this change has the potential to accelerate completion of the overall study even though it will delay receipt of our interim analysis results. The effects on timing of our interim analysis will hopefully be partially offset by expanding our inclusion criteria and including thrombolytic non-responder patients. Previously, we were anticipating our interim analysis would be available in the summer of 2025. And now we expect it quarter 4 2025. We believe that we are adequately financed through the interim analysis. Turning to Slide 6. I would reiterate that we firmly believe that the protocol updates will accelerate enrollment rates with the addition of a subgroup of stroke patients that have the potential to be high responders to DM199 therapy as well as improving the potential commercial value of DM199, further that with the new statistical analysis plan, we have the best potential for clinical success with the smallest possible study. I will now turn the call back over to Rick.