Debbie Booker from Southampton had an operation to replace her left knee in 2016.
Although initially it appeared to have been successful, she started to experience severe pain a year later while on holiday in Majorca.
"I laid a bag of ice on my knee and for four days I had to do that every few hours because I was in agony," she says.
A knee replacement involves removing damaged surfaces of the femur (thigh bone) and the tibia (shin bone) and replacing them with artificial components.
Debbie says the pain resulted from the knee implant slipping from the tibia and wearing away the bone.
Over the next few months she says she became reliant on prescription painkillers: "I was on fentanyl and morphine. It took me a long time to come off of the morphine because I was addicted."
She has since had a second knee replacement, but the problems caused by the initial failed implant have caused long-lasting health problems, she says.
"It's put my whole body out of alignment, I walk with a limp," says Debbie. As a result, she is now awaiting a hip replacement.
Another patient, "Diana" (not her real name), had a knee implant fitted in 2021 which also slipped and started to wear away her shin bone, leaving her virtually immobile.
"The consultant told me every time I stood up, I was standing on a broken leg. It was absolute agony," she says.
Diana asked to be anonymous as she used to work in the NHS.
As part of their knee replacements, both Debbie and Diana had received a specific implant section, known as a "stemmed option tibial component", also known as a "tibial tray".
In broad terms, this section lacked a layer of plastic contained in earlier, well-regarded versions of the NexGen replacement knee.