Tris & Edta

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16 adverse event reports submitted to the FDA

Important: Adverse event reports do not establish that a drug caused or contributed to the event. Consult your veterinarian before making treatment decisions.
16
Total Reports
0
Deaths Reported
0.0%
Death Rate

Active Ingredients

Tris & Edta

Administration Routes

Auricular (Otic)UnknownTopical

Species Affected

Dog 15
Cat 1

Most Affected Breeds

Retriever - Labrador 3
Bulldog - French 2
Beagle 1
Retriever - Golden 1
Bulldog 1
Spaniel - Cocker American 1
Shar Pei 1
Shih Tzu 1
Maltese 1
Terrier - Cairn 1

Most Reported Reactions

Vomiting 5
Diarrhoea 4
Anorexia 3
Decreased appetite 3
Ataxia 2
Icterus 2
Elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT) 2
Elevated total bilirubin 2
Elevated serum alkaline phosphatase (SAP) 2
Emesis 2
Lethargy (see also Central nervous system depression in 'Neurological') 2
Pacing 2

Outcome Breakdown

Ongoing
10 (62.5%)
Recovered/Normal
6 (37.5%)

Data Summary

Metric Value
Total adverse event reports 16
Reports involving death 0
Case-fatality rate (reported events) 0.0%
Distinct species in reports 2
Distinct breeds in reports 13
Distinct reactions reported 20
Active ingredients on file 1

Source: FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine — Adverse Event Reporting (CVM AER). Counts reflect voluntary reports only.

Tris & Edta Adverse Event Insights

The FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine database currently holds 16 adverse event reports referencing Tris & Edta, including 0 reports in which the animal died — a 0.0% case-fatality figure among reported events only, not a population-level mortality rate. Active ingredient on file: Tris & Edta. Reported administration routes include Auricular (Otic), Unknown, Topical. These numbers reflect voluntary submissions from pet owners, veterinarians, and manufacturers and therefore under-represent mild events and over-represent severe ones — a pattern the FDA has documented repeatedly for pharmacovigilance datasets.

The species most frequently named in Tris & Edta reports are Dog (15 reports), Cat (1 reports), with Dog accounting for the largest share. Within those species, Retriever - Labrador (3), Bulldog - French (2), Beagle (1) appear most often — though breed popularity and ownership density shape these counts as much as any drug-specific sensitivity. This distribution matters because the same active ingredient can behave very differently across body sizes, ages, and species physiology.

The most commonly reported clinical signs associated with Tris & Edta are Vomiting (5), Diarrhoea (4), Anorexia (3), Decreased appetite (3). Of the 16 reports with a coded outcome, Ongoing is the leading category at 62.5%. Because FDA adverse event data describes correlation rather than causation, these figures are best used to frame informed questions with a veterinarian and to compare reporting patterns across related products — not as a standalone safety verdict on Tris & Edta.

Source: FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine — Adverse Event Reports FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine — Adverse Event Reports Data reflects voluntary submissions and may not represent actual incidence rates

Related

Data sourced from official AKC, AVMA, ACVO, and breed-club veterinary references. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainBreed Editorial