Ketamine is somewhere between three and five times less potent in its ability to block what we think is the primary target of ketamine in the brain, which is the NMDA glutamate receptor. The fact that there's that differential affinity for ketamine has been taken up by the pharmaceutical industry where you have different companies developing alternatives to ketamine. But when we go back to our versus S. I'm just very confused by this right and left handed shorthand that is sometimes used to describe the differences in these two. Because it seems like, well, if I flipped one 180 degrees, would they not bind in exactly the same way? Could you just shed some light on that?

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