I am looking for some help from people who have experience of their hyperthyroid cats being on Vidalta tablets. My cat Smudge was put on Vidalta about 6 weeks ago, she initially perked up and seemed to be back to her normal playful self but this only lasted a week. After that she became withdrawn, and started suffering from lesions on her head. My vet saw her and prescribed a steroid injection to clear the skin up. This did clear the skin up for awhile, but by the time she went back for her 3 week blood test her head was again covered in lesions and looked very sore. The vet gave her a long acting steroid and advised not to come off vidalta as smudge would overcome this problem as it was a settling in phase of the tablets. She was reluctant at first to say that it was a reaction to vidalta but eventually agreed to report it to the manufacturer. Last Wednesday (6 weeks after being put on vidalta) I saw smudge laying in the garden, when i went to get her in i noticed she was hemorrhaging from her nose and mouth. She was also very unstable on her back end and her tail was limp. I took her straight to the vets who advised to take her home and keep her calm, if she was still poorly in the morning they would admit her for an xray. They could not find any body trauma. I mentioned vidalta, and was told it was impossible to say whether this could be linked. 4 hours later the vets admitted her into the hospital as her bleeding had got worse and was now coming from her back end as well. They did xrays straight away but found nothing untoward. Next morning i got a call to say she was going downhill rapidly, they needed to do blood tests but couldn't get blood as she was bruising badly and her veins kept collapsing. They managed to obtain some blood (not sure where from as blood tests were impossible) and once it was examined they could not find a single clotting platelet. My vet admitted that she had never seen this before. I went straight in and they discussed blood transfusion, but she was too weak to be transferred to a hospital that could do it. It was decided that the kindest thing to do was to put her out of her suffering. I got a feeling from the vet that vidalta was a potential cause. I spoke to the vet who originally prescribed vidalta and she was very defensive. I am in talks with the manufacturers and am awaiting their vet to call me once she has discussed the case with my vets.
I would appreciate any feed back on vidalta tablets both good and bad, and do not wish to scare anybody whose cats are on these tablets as nothing is confirmed.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Lisa