The survival rate of infantile intestinal obstruction is basically 100% as long as timely surgery is performed and treatment is accurate, but there may be sequelae if treatment is delayed and substandard. Infantile intestinal obstruction is one of the common acute abdominal diseases in infancy and childhood. Early symptoms include abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea and vomiting, stopping or decreasing anal defecation and so on, and infants usually show obvious performance during the onset of the attack, such as incessant crying and noisy, and abdominal bulging and so on. If the infant is taken to the hospital for diagnosis and treatment in time, he or she can be cured, and the survival rate of the operation is about 100%. If the parents do not pay attention to the onset of the infant, time is prone to intestinal perforation, intestinal necrosis, shock and other complications, this time to seek medical treatment, although it can survive, but there may be sequelae, or even life-threatening, and need to be cured for a longer period of time.