After surgery or an in-office procedure, it’s common to hear that your symptoms are “a complication.” That may be true medically—but legally, your case may still involve a defect or warning failure if the device’s risks weren’t properly disclosed, or if the device performed outside what it should have been designed to do.
Because Colorado timelines and evidence matter, start by creating a “device injury record” you can hand to counsel:
- Identify the device: model/brand, lot/batch number, implant date, or any paperwork from the clinic/hospital
- Capture the medical trail: operative report, discharge summary, follow-up notes, imaging, lab results, and revision surgery details
- Record symptoms and limitations: what changed, when it changed, and how it affects daily life and work
If you’re searching for help like “defective implant lawyer near me” or “medical device injury attorney” in Golden, CO, the best next step is a review that confirms (1) what device was involved and (2) how your medical timeline links the device to your injury.


