Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon - Articles Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon Article RSS http://drbrinker.com Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon Article RSS feed. . Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon http://drbrinker.com/tresources/en/images/icons/tendenci34x15.gif Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeonhttp://drbrinker.com no Copyright 2005, Dr. Mark Brinker, Houston Orthopedic Surgeon Tendenci Membership Management Software by Schipul - The Web Marketing Company en-us noemail@drbrinker.com Tue, 07 Apr 2015 22:29:40 GMT Articles http://drbrinker.com/en/art/99/ Failure Analysis Of Retrieved Cemented Total Knee Prosthesis <br> <h2>Clinical Materials, 1989<br> </h2> <h3>Author: Thomas L. Halvorson, Stephen D. Cook, Mark R. Brinker, Kevin A. Thomas, and Patricia M. Sandborn<br> </h3> <p>Click here to read the entire <a target="_blank" href="/attachments/articles/99/Failure Analysis Of Retrieved Cemented Total Knee Prosthesis.pdf">published article by Dr Brinker</a></p> <br> <hr /> <div> Failure in total knee arthroplasty has been studied extensively, Aseptic loosening of the tibial component has been the most common cause of failure. Progressive component loosening may lead to malalignment, instability and pain. Loss of normal prosthetic alignment results in component overload with subsequent deformation of tone or of the component itself. It has been suggested that deformation of polyethylene articular surfaces may contribute to failure and the need for surgical revision. l~l4 Hood et al.' studied articular surface wear patterns in 48 total knee arthroplasties and found significantly greater... <br> </div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><br> </div> <br><br>9-Jan-89 9:00 AM Failure Analysis Of Retrieved Cemented Total Knee Prosthesis Clinical Materials, 1989 Author: Thomas L. Halvorson, Stephen D. Cook, Mark R. Brinker, Kevin A. Thomas, and Patricia M. Sandborn Click here to read the entire published article by Dr Brinker Failure in total knee arthroplasty has been studied extensively, Aseptic loosening of the tibial component has been the most common cause of failure. Progressive component loosening may lead to malalignment, instability and pain. Loss of normal prosthetic alignment results in component overload with subsequent deformation of tone or of the component itself. It has been suggested that deformation of polyethylene articular surfaces may contribute to failure and the need for surgical revision. l~l4 Hood et al.' studied articular surface wear patterns in 48 total knee arthroplasties and found significantly greater... no http://drbrinker.com/en/art/99/ Mon, 09 Jan 1989 15:00:00 GMT