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  • Australia news live: home battery subsidy helped add 50% to capacity in four months as Labor hails ‘solar nation’ | Australian politics

    Australia news live: home battery subsidy helped add 50% to capacity in four months as Labor hails ‘solar nation’ | Australian politics

    Key events

    Good Morning

    And welcome to another Sunday Guardian live blog.

    Climate change and energy minister Chris Bowen has declared Australia a “solar nation” after 100,000 households and small businesses have signed up to a government program to help install home batteries. The government says there has been a 50% jump in home battery capacity within four months of the program starting.

    Anthony Albanese is on his way to Asia for two international summits at which Donald Trump is expected to make an appearance. The prime minister will head to South Korea and Malaysia to attend the Asean and Apec summits amid growing concerns about Chinese activity in the Pacific.

    I’m Royce Kurmelovs and I’ll be taking the blog through the day.

    With that, let’s get started …

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  • ESA’s Swarm spots a fast-growing anomaly in the Earth’s magnetic field

    ESA’s Swarm spots a fast-growing anomaly in the Earth’s magnetic field

    A representation of the South Atlantic Anomaly in 2025 (Image source: Finlay, C.C. et al., 2025; cropped)

    Using data from ESA’s Swarm satellite constellation, scientists have discovered a growing weak spot in the Earth’s magnetic field. The…

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  • How HIV’s shape-shifting protein reveals clues for smarter drug design

    How HIV’s shape-shifting protein reveals clues for smarter drug design

    LA JOLLA, October 24, 2025 — The rate of HIV infection continues to climb globally. Around 40 million people live with HIV-1, the most common HIV strain. While symptoms can now be better managed with lifelong treatment, there is no cure to…

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  • Mother of 3 Receives the ‘Biggest Shock’ of Her Life After Going in for Her First Mammogram at 40 (Exclusive)

    Mother of 3 Receives the ‘Biggest Shock’ of Her Life After Going in for Her First Mammogram at 40 (Exclusive)

    NEED TO KNOW

    • In 2021, Nasreen Shahi faced an unexpected cancer diagnosis during what she thought would be a routine checkup

    • She underwent aggressive treatment while navigating daily life and finding ways to stay positive and strong for her family

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  • TCT 2025 Science Published Across JACC Journals Explores FIRE, EMERGE LAA and More

    TCT 2025 Science Published Across JACC Journals Explores FIRE, EMERGE LAA and More

    As TCT 2025 kicks off in San Francisco, key research from the conference will be simultaneously published across JACC Journals – including JACC, JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions, JACC: Case Reports, and JACC: Advances. The following are some highlights from the abstracts:

    FIRE: Complete Revascularization Effective Across Spectrum of Kidney Function
    Physiology-guided complete revascularization was effective regardless of renal function in patients with a myocardial infarction (MI) and multivessel disease, based on findings from a prespecified analysis of the multicenter, investigator-initiated FIRE trial. The 1,445 patients were 75 years and older and randomized to physiology-guided complete revascularization or culprit-only revascularization and stratified by estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <60 mL/min/1.73m2 (n=662) or ≥60 mL/min/1.73m2 (n=783). More patients in the eGFR <60 group, vs. >60, experienced a primary endpoint, a composite of death, MI, stroke and ischemia-driven revascularization at three years (34% vs. 20%). A lower eGFR was independently associated with a higher risk of the primary endpoint (adjusted hazard rate [HR], 1.42; p<0.001). Complete revascularization reduced the primary endpoint in both eGFR groups (HR, 0.68 and 0.80 respectively). “Despite the traditional hesitancy to pursue complete revascularization in [chronic kidney disease] patients due to concerns about procedural risk or contrast nephropathy, our data supports its use even in this high-risk group,” write study authors Anna Cantone, MD, et al. In an accompanying editorial comment, Hitinder S. Gurm, MD, FACC, and David E. Hamilton, MD, suggest that “the time has come to abandon therapeutic nihilism based on renal function alone.”

    EMERGE LAA: Intracardiac vs. Transesophageal Echocardiography-Guided Closure
    Results from the EMERGE LAA post approval study showed that the rates of procedural success and left atrial appendage (LAA) closure were high whether the Amulet includer implantation was guided by intracardiac echocardiography (ICE) or transesophageal echocardiography (TEE). In this analysis of 11,848 patients from ACC’s LAAO Registry who had an Amulet includer implanted between August 2021 and December 2023, the procedure was guided by ICE in 433 patients, TEE in 9,793 and both in 1,622. Procedural success was 95%, 96% and 96%, respectively (p=0.324). At 45 days, there was >95% at clinically relevant closure in all three groups and the rates across groups were similar for the safety composite endpoint and 45-day major adverse event composite outcome. Both the ICE and ICE+TEE arms had a longer procedural time (104.8 min and 98.8 min vs. 82 min with TEE), but study authors Mohamad Alkhouli, MD, FACC, et al., note this may reflect a learning curve because more experience with ICE led to “increased implant success, decreased procedural times and lower adverse events rates.”

    TTVR Using EVOQUE Post T-TEER
    In a case series of patients with residual severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR) after tricuspid transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (T-TEER), transcatheter tricuspid valve replacement (TTVR) was successful in 15 of the 16 patients. John T. Saxon, MD, FACC, et al., also reported that 15 were alive at 30 days, 13 improved to NYHA class I/II (p<0.001) and TR severity improved to none or mild in 93% (p<0.001). The median age of the patients was 75 years and 69% were women, and the median STS PROM was 8.3% and 81% were in NYHA class III/IV heart failure. Of note, eight of the patients also underwent electrosurgical leaflet modification with a novel technique (clip liberalization to facilitate TTVR [CLEFT]) immediately before TTVR. The authors write that, “our conceptual framework for selection of CLEFT versus stand-alone EVOQUE TTVR without leaflet modification facilitated a high percentage of procedural success with limited residual [paravalvular leak], suggesting this is a promising approach.” “These are excellent results from this pioneering experience in a range of anatomies,” write Jaffar M. Khan, MD, PhD, and Harminder S. Gill, MD, in an accompanying editorial comment. “[The authors] demonstrate TTVR after failed TEER is feasible, and reasonably safe and effective.”

    EuroTR Registry: T-TEER in Patients With CIEDs
    In a study leveraging data from the EuroTR Registry, investigators Jennifer von Stein, MD, et al., found that T-TEER was safe and effective in 3,025 patients, 851 of whom had transvalvular cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIEDs) – with TR ≤1+ and TR ≤2+ being achieved in 40% and 80% of patients at discharge, respectively, and in 29% and 69% of patients at a median follow-up of 269 days. Between 385 matching pairs of CIED and non-CIED patients, residual TR, functional status and two-year heart failure hospitalization-free survival were comparable. CIED presence was not significantly associated with more adverse outcomes (HR, 1.31; p=0.064) but was not associated with residual TR >2+ (odds ratio, 0.98; p=0.915), which was found to be more prognostically relevant. “Given the comparable safety and efficacy outcomes, patients with CIEDs should continue to be included in future trials to refine selection criteria and validate long-term outcomes in this growing population,” write the investigators.

    TRANSPARENT Registry: M-TEER Feasible in Patients With Obstructive HCM, SAM-Related MR
    The retrospective, international, multicenter TRANSPARENT Registry study found transcatheter mitral edge-to-edge repair (M-TEER) was safe and effective in 35 patients at high surgical risk with obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), left ventricle outflow tract (LVOT) obstruction and moderate-to-severe systolic anterior motion (SAM)-related mitral regurgitation (MR). Mitral Valve Academic Research Consortium-defined technical, 30-day device and procedural success was achieved in 94%, 91% and 88% of cases, respectively, with MR <2 achieved in 97% of patients. Additionally, LVOT gradient decreased from 62.0 mm Hg to 16.0 mm Hg and persisted during a median follow-up of 523 days. The proportion of patients in NYHA class I/II increased from 31% to 88%, and the composite outcome of all-cause death, admission for acute decompensated heart failure, M-TEER re-do or surgical valve replacement occurred in 26% of cases, primarily driven by acute decompensated heart failure. Of interest, “no patients in our cohort received mavacamten or aficamten,” investigators Luca Testa, MD, PhD, et al. note. “These findings suggest that, in the future, combining myosin inhibitors with M-TEER could further enhance both hemodynamic and clinical outcomes in this challenging patient population.”

    Ischemic Left Ventricular Dysfunction Focus of Review
    A review by Matthew Ryan, PhD, et al., dives into the epidemiology, pathophysiology and treatment strategies for ischemic left ventricular dysfunction (iLVD). The authors examine current evidence surrounding revascularization in iLVD and provide a detailed framework to select between CABG and PCI in different patient populations and planning and performing PCI. “The choice of PCI or CABG should be informed by patient factors and choices, rather than institutional preference,” write Ryan, et al. “Delivering safe and effective revascularization requires meticulous patient selection, procedure planning, and significant expertise within the catheter lab team and wider healthcare institution.” They emphasize the importance of not only shared decision-making, but teamwork, communication and leadership among the entire cardiovascular care team. They also discuss current gaps in the evidence, ongoing controversies in the field and future directions to better study PCI in a complex, high-risk patient population.

    Click here to see all the articles simultaneously published in the JACC Journals.


    Keywords:
    Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics, TCT25

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  • The 40-40 club: Luka Dončić begins new season with pair of prolific performances

    The 40-40 club: Luka Dončić begins new season with pair of prolific performances

    Luka Dončić was the NBA’s Player of the Night on October 24.

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Luka Dončić has begun his first full season with the Lakers on a serious heater.

    The Slovenian superstar is off to one of the greatest starts to a season in NBA…

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  • Casio to release ring-sized G-SHOCK

    Casio Computer Co Ltd has announced the Nov 8 release of the DWN-5600, a new G-SHOCK watch that incorporates shock-resistant structure and 200-meter water resistance in a ring size that represents the smallest dimensions in the brand’s…

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  • Brentford 3-2 Liverpool (Oct 25, 2025) Game Analysis

    Brentford 3-2 Liverpool (Oct 25, 2025) Game Analysis

    Liverpool matched their worst-ever Premier League run as they sunk to a 3-2 defeat at Brentford on Saturday for their fourth consecutive league loss.

    Despite appearing to put an end to their disastrous run of form with a 5-1 crushing of Eintracht…

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  • adidas para Bad Bunny x Mercedes-AMG F1 Mexico 2025 – Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team

    adidas para Bad Bunny x Mercedes-AMG F1 Mexico 2025 – Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team

    1. adidas para Bad Bunny x Mercedes-AMG F1 Mexico 2025  Mercedes-AMG PETRONAS F1 Team
    2. Mexico City Grand Prix 2025 race, qualifying and practice times, results and weather forecast  BBC
    3. McLaren favorite, Ferrari behind: trends before the Mexican Grand…

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  • ADHD Drugs Do Much More Than Help You Focus, Study Reveals : ScienceAlert

    ADHD Drugs Do Much More Than Help You Focus, Study Reveals : ScienceAlert

    An ADHD diagnosis means a person is prone to impulsivity and distractibility, which can manifest in the form of substance misuse, traffic accidents, criminality and even suicidal behavior.

    A recent study published in the British Medical…

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