 We're just going to go ahead and get started now. Jeff is with his comrades in Georgia, having a good time, not here to introduce our case rounds for today. So I was in charge of case rounds for this month, and today we'll be featuring some glaucoma cases. And not every case that we present today is just a high-pressure case. So we hope that it'll be informative and also interesting in terms of the different discussions that take place in the patients that we see in our clinic. So Zach is going to go first. He's going to present our first case. And then Hari is going to present our last two cases of the morning. He's going to do his A really consistent with for his NERVs, his NERVs, and his OCT. We decided to just start with Tana Prost and only his right eye, the back in a month for another pressure check. So we saw him, his vision was count fingers in the right eye. His pressure, you can see here, Tana Prost. However, his vision, yeah, that we urged him to continue as Latana Prost. He was somewhat reduced due to the check the status of his retina, intraculopressin P correlates with P or anybody else, and they're not in such good shape, but I don't know. I mean, maybe there's some subtle ischemic changes, then yeah, I think so, but the control is pretty long there. I don't think the difference in the paper, as we saw, the difference of 12 or 15 that we had in the clinic, most of the time when the pressure is three to six points different, I think that's more of an indication. Maybe you should look for Marvogalcoma, but the pressure difference this great. I think, change somebody with these risk factors, I think it's reasonable. You know, I didn't see him originally, so I don't know. I don't necessarily, more like a refractive issue, he corrected it in 2020, so I'm not sure, but when he came back, and Dr. Roscoe can correct me, but when he came back with the film over his eye, that's actually...