 Hi, I'm Dee Stevenson from Venice, Florida. I'm an ophthalmologist, CEO, CFO, Chief Bottle Washer at Stevenson Eye Associates. And I have been in practice for 28 years. And what I'd like to talk to you about today is, you know, as we're learning about ophthalmology and surgical procedures, we have to decide, you know, what kind of implants we're gonna use and what ones fits best in our hands. And, you know, it's easy for me to sit up here and tell you this is how to do this and this is how to do that. But the thing I like to tell residents and students as always, you need to find something that works in your hands, learn how to use it and learn how to use it well, know what your outcomes are and learn how to perfect it. When I'm doing surgery, I do a 1.8, I'm a mixed surgeon. I actually don't do on-access surgery. I'm a 12 o'clock surgeon just because that's what I like to do. Making a capsulotomy here, I try to make it about five and a half millimeters, 5.25 to five millimeters in diameter. I use a free form, make it with a cystotome. You can use a utrata forceps. There's some other procedures that you can do that are all manual. Of course, there's FIMTO and I'll show and share with those capsulotomies and techniques shortly. If we go a little, I'm gonna speed this up just a little bit so we can get to the implants. Again, I'm just showing you in real fast motion here, just the capsulotomy, the hydro dissection and hydro delineation that occurs after you've done the capsulotomy. And I do a divide and conquer technique. I still to this day do a divide and conquer technique. I have to give that credit to Dr. Harry Grabo who taught me when I went in private practice 28 years ago. Once the INA is performed, I think it's very important that we polish our capsule for any kind of implant that you use. And I use a capsule polisher that is diamond dusted and I try to dust the posterior capsule as well as the anterior leaflets. The lens I'm gonna show you here is the LI61A0. It's an aspheric lens and it has to be, your incision has to be enlarged to 2.8. It's an inserter that I call, it's an inserter, not an injector because you can stop it at any time. So I'm opening the wound here to 2.8 with a metal blade and the inserter is really nice because it kind of blossoms and the lens comes out in a planar fashion. So I'm gonna just show you the LI61A0. And it comes out, it put the leading haptic in the bag and then just rotate it and pronate it and drop the trailing haptic into the bag and remove the viscoelastic both in front and behind the lens. This lens has been on the market for a very long time and it's very reliable, refractive-wise. Postoperatively there are really no any surprises. But it's a very nice lens to learn on because it is so predictable in the bag, predictable. You can put this lens, also it's three-piece, you can put it in the sulcus, you can capture the optics. So there's a lot of things that you can do with this one particular IOL. So this for many years was my go-to lens. However, it is a silicone lens but it is an aspheric optic so it's a very, very nice lens and very stable in the eye. Thank you very much. That was the video on insertion of the LI61A0. I wish you good luck and enjoy the good outcomes you'll get with this lens. Thank you.