Thank you, Chloe. Welcome everyone to SANUWAVE Health, Inc.'s First Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. As many of you probably noticed, the Form 10-Q was filed with the SEC last night, and our earnings release was issued this morning, along with an updated presentation, which was made available on our website in the investor section. You can please refer to that during this presentation. It really is useful, promise. Okay. So joining on the call today, we have Peter Sorensen, our CFO. And after the presentation, we will open the call up to Q&A. Let me begin with the forward-looking statements and other disclosures. This call may contain forward-looking statements, such as statements relating to future financial results, production expectations, and plans for future business development activities. Investors are cautioned that any such forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties of which are beyond the company's ability to control. Description of these risks and uncertainties and other factors that could affect our financial results is included in our filings. Actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statement. Certain percentages discussed in this call are calculated from the underlying whole dollar amount and therefore may not be recalculable from the rounded numbers used for disclosure purposes. As a reminder, our discussion today will include non-GAAP numbers. Reconciliations between our GAAP and non-GAAP results can be found in our recently filed 10-Q for the period ended March 31, 2025. Okay. Thus prefaced, let's get to the interesting part. So Q1 was a strong start to the year coming in ahead of expectations, and, obviously, we're very pleased to put up a 61% year-on-year growth comp. In a quarter in which we hired a new head of sales and worked through some associated Salesforce restructuring. Placing 98 new Altamist systems in Q1 represented a 28% increase from system sales of 43 in Q1 of last year, and we did this without any unusually large orders in the quarter. And with no customer representing more than a mid-six percentage of our overall revenue. I mean, frankly, the quarter came in a bit stronger than we expected, but, you know, never a bad thing to get a good start to the year, especially in Q1, which is typically quieter times seasonally. For SANUWAVE Health, Inc. and for medical devices in general. We got going with a number of new customers in the quarter, some of whom we believe have excellent potential for follow-on business and growth. We ended the quarter with 1,145 systems in the field, 429 of which have been placed in the trailing twelve months. Moving on to applicators. Sales in the quarter were $5.8 million versus $4.1 million last Q1. This was down very slightly from Q4, which is not unexpected, and it's actually a pretty typical pattern, albeit one that was swamped by other factors last Q1. And so perhaps warrants a little bit of explanation. Patients see their out-of-pocket maximums reset every January, and thus, it's quite common to see people delay treatment in Q1 once they start having to pay out of pocket. Again, you know, this tends to lead to a bit of reduced usage in Q1 until it starts to catch up in Q2 and later in the year. Applicators constituted 62% of our revenues in Q1, which is toward the high end, but within our 55-65% target. Gross margins increased a bit for the quarter versus Q4 as a result of strong systems pricing and efficiencies with our contract manufacturers. We started cutting steel on our new four-cavity applicator mold back in January, and we are on schedule to complete its qualification and have production, commercial product in Q4 of this year. This should both ensure additional capacity and lower production costs for our consumables. So as you can see from our balance sheet, we used Q1 to build up inventory on both Ultramist systems and of as well. And we also took the opportunity to stockpile a number of longer lead time components to enable more rapid production ramp-up if needed. Like, we've been doing this, both because having lots of razor blades on hand is never a bad thing for those in the razor business. And in support of our elephant hunting aspirations, toward engaging with larger customers. Ultimately, having systems on hand to enable us to really just take yes for an answer on a large order is never a bad thing. And, you know, for the first time since I've been CEO, we're really at a quite comfortable inventory level and, to be honest, it feels comfortable. So you know, especially during such uncertain, you know, economic and trade conditions as these, we feel really good about our supply chains and our manufacturing. And as of right now, we do not anticipate any material cost availability or margin issues resulting in the current tariff situation. Our production is domestic, and we are well set up for parts and benefiting from economies of scale. Now just as a note of housekeeping, our uplist to match this quarter was a great step for us, but it also came with a $295,000 listing fee which affected our operating profit, our EBITDA, and our adjusted EBITDA figures. Obviously, we hope not to have that recur next quarter. So with that, I will turn you over to Peter Sorensen, our CFO, who can walk you through the rest of our financials.