I experienced a related issue yesterday - I have vertical menu in which the currently selected page's menu item has a background "blob" graphic to the left of it. This works fine on all browsers. I then added the same background image as a rollover to the menu, using "a:hover". This works fine on all browsers but mobile/iOS Safari. When I use the menu on the iPad the blob-graphic completely disappears at some seemingly random interval and never comes back unless I update the image and html files on the server. (Clearing the Safari cache has no effect).
This is my guess as to why it happens and how I solved it...
The :hover behaviour on touch-screen devices such as the iPad/iPhone is broken (because you can't really hover on a touchscreen). So the effect of using a hover seems to be that the browser believes the image associated with the hover is redundant and therefore doesn't cache it. However when a page featuring the hover-image is next loaded, the request to the server will detect that the image-file has not been altered, and thus deem it unnecessary to retrieve it (from the server), and therefore try to use the local cached copy which, I am presuming, doesn't exist (or at least not correctly). This causes the image to disappear (all copies of it on the page vanish).
Thus if you use the same physical image-file for the background of the hover-item and for the current-page menu image (or any other image on the page), both/all will effectively disappear when the browser decides to use its (non-existant) cached version.
One solution is to have two identical image files, and use one for the hovered-over menu-item, and the other one for anywhere else it's required. Then it doesn't matter if mobile-Safari discards the one associated with the hover (as there is no rollover-effect on those devices), but it won't effect the graphic associated with any other menu items (e.g. to mark the current page or whatever).
Can you let me know if that solves your problem? I couldn't find anything about this particular bug despite hours of searching.