Chris Kresser: A few ways to answer that. Number one, in the presentation as you know, the criteria that I advocate in the presentation are different than the NUNM or Commonwealth guidelines, which are just machine-generated criteria. I’m encouraging all of you to think about things like transit time and other factors in terms of how they affect the results. The other thing is that there was recently a new paper published related to a consensus that was reached among SIBO experts in the research community for interpretation of breath test results. I just actually updated the SIBO presentation with these new guidelines. If you haven’t already been notified about that, you should be any moment. You’ll be able to go back and check the relevant sections for the updates, and then I’m also going to be talking about it in the academy, which some of you may have seen launched today. There’s a new monthly membership training platform that Kresser Institute is offering so I can keep you all up to date with the latest and greatest discoveries and developments in functional medicine, ancestral health, practice management, etc. I wanted a mechanism to stay ultra current with all this stuff on an ongoing basis. But, in short, those criteria were updated as follows: Number one, they now consider methane over 10 parts per million or above at any point during the test, including the third hour, to be a positive result. That’s a pretty big difference. Prior, NUNM was looking at methane of 12 at any point during the first two hours, and then the Quintron criteria was an increase in 12, so just the absolute level of 10 or above now at any point is a positive. Then, the cutoff for hydrogen is now 90 minutes instead of 120 minutes. You have to see a rise of 20 parts per million or more in the first 90 minutes rather than the first 120 minutes. I think that’s a really good change because as I argued in the presentation itself orocecal transit time on average is somewhere around 75 to 80 minutes, so having a cutoff of 120 minutes didn’t really make sense. Check that out in the updated content, and we’ll be talking about it more going forward.