Sure, Robbie. I mean, listen, I think the maintaining of our guidance range, you know, we've had a great first quarter here and achieved what we wanted to achieve from, you know, a target growth perspective. You know, high single-digit sales growth, double-digit EPS growth. We talked about getting back to that formula and, you know, excluding COVID testing sales, which I could tell you right now are our lowest gross margin product, you know, we grew over 8%. So I think on the top line, everything that we've kind of put in place we feel very good about as evidenced in our first quarter. Gross margin expansion is a key element of our plan to get back to double-digit EPS. To your question on tariffs, it's going to be an important muscle to exercise here in really strong performance here. I think we guided 70 basis points of improvement, then we saw about 140 in the first quarter. So really strong performance for the team there. And then the pipeline to kind of sustain the growth, Robbie, I think you saw a lot of activity this first quarter, whether it's the Volt CE mark, beginning of our IVL trial, the NCD for CardioMEMS, the new data on TriClip. So there's a lot of great activity there when you think about kind of how we guided in the beginning of the year, everything is pretty certain for us in terms of how we're executing and the expectations we have from the products. I guess the only aspect there of maybe some uncertainty that you raised is the tariff piece. And, you know, I'd say prior to tariffs, prior to the whole tariffs, we were even considering given the momentum that we were seeing in the base business, you know, we're even considering raising our EPS guidance. But, you know, tariffs are here, so we felt reaffirming our guidance is already, I think, a pretty strong statement. We've completed a pretty strong assessment of every possible different type of scenario. Not just in what it could how it could impact us, but more importantly, Robbie, how what are the different scenarios to be able to mitigate it? So the team has been working, call it, very diligently. I think we only took a break over the weekend to watch the playoff hole, and then we went right back to it. I can tell you, we feel very comfortable right now with the information that we've got and obviously looking at potential scenarios that could arise down the road that we can cover an impact of tariff, which I'd say really two geographies, the United States and China. So right now, we estimate the tariff impact in 2025 to be a few hundred million dollars. That's a half-year impact because I don't see any impact in Q2. And then we start to kind of see the impact happening in Q3. But there are other items here that I'd say are variables related to the tariffs that help offset. I could tell you there's not a lot of R&D slowing down or SG&A slowing down in those mitigation plans. But there are other variables to consider here. FX, we could see what's going on with the dollar as this discussion of tariff is ongoing. Interest rates, tax, there are a lot of, let's call it, levers that, you know, we've got at our disposal, put it this way, to be able to mitigate. Our job here is to manage this in the aggregate and contemplate and contemplate here, you know, trade-offs of the decisions. You know, we're working on I think the key thing here that as we're going through it over the last ten days is there are definitely short-term things that can be done to mitigate and close the gap. And we will be looking at those and delivering on those. But I think more importantly, Robbie, is how can you actually look at these on an ongoing basis? You know, one thing we have learned from tariffs is they don't go away. So whatever comes, it stays and stays for a while. Look at the tariffs that went in place in 2017. They're still there. So we need to think about how do you mitigate this more in a long-term sustainable way. So, yeah, you can use a balance sheet and you can build some inventory, and we'll probably do some of that. But if your entire strategy is building inventory, guess what's going to happen in 2026 or whenever that inventory runs out? So we're really looking at the manufacturing network and optimizing it. As I said in my comments, prepared comments, we've got ninety manufacturing sites across the world. We have the manufacturing strategy and framework that's been in place for decades, Robbie. And, you know, they weren't it's a framework that hasn't been put in place because of tariffs. But it's going to serve us well that same framework when we think about more long-term planning for tariffs. So, hey, I understand the temptation that many of you will have just to, you know, take this number that I've given or a few hundred million dollars and then just double it as an annualized impact, I think it's a little bit too early to do that. Like I said, our manufacturing network has got the ability on a more long-term basis to communicate this considerably. And you just got to have intent. You got to have a balance sheet, obviously, to be able to make the CapEx investments. Some of them take longer. Some of them you can do pretty fast. I mean, think about what we did during COVID, where we built three ISO-certified GMP clean remediators manufacturing. We did it in, you know, three months. So, you know, there is opportunity to do that also. But I think the key thing here is, you know, how do you balance the short-term, the medium-term, and the long-term? And we're not putting everything in a short-term even though we are going to leverage, you know, some of those variables that I talked about, FX, interest, tax, etcetera. But we're really focusing on how to mitigate this going forward. So thanks a lot.