Total knee replacement has become an established form of treatment for gonarthrosis and usually results in excellent relief of pain and approximately 90 degrees of joint motion with satisfactory joint stability. The anatomic stability that cannot be restored at surgery must be provided for by additional prosthetic stability. Fixation of prosthetic devices, particularly in the tibia, is marginal and results in an increased incidence of loosening when the quality of bone is weak, as in osteoporosis, or when shear stress is increased because of malalignment or prosthetic constraint. Resurfacing techniques provide the greatest options if surgical revision is necessary. Surgical goals should be realistically assessed so as to maintain the best potential for future treatment options.