Tracheobronchial foreign bodies in children are one of the difficult clinical emergencies for both anesthesiologists and otolaryngologists. Children have relatively narrow airways, immature protection mechanisms, and high anesthetic risk. Today (March 20, 2012), two children with airway foreign bodies, both aged 19 months, were operated on. The boy had inhaled a chewed sunflower for 4 days, and half of the sunflower peel was blocked in the right bronchus and half in the main trachea. The surgery was a race to the finish and a thrill. The girl accidentally inhaled crushed peanuts, and has been treated locally for 14 days for pneumonia, and it was found during the surgery that the crushed peanuts were blocked in the left bronchial opening, and the crushed peanuts were wrapped around the meat buds, which were easy to bleed when clamped, and there was a large amount of purulent discharge in the left bronchus. Although the surgery was successful, it is difficult to recover from the mental (fear, fear that the child will be left on the operating table) and physical (working overtime outside of 8 hours) damage to the surgeons, anesthesiologists and surgical nurses in such an acute and critical condition. To parents with children, do not touch the soy, peanuts, melon seeds, pine nuts and other foods during the holidays, not to mention the food in the mouth on the floor, the key to airway foreign body this disease is prevention, the child’s health and safety to have the happiness of the family. Melon rind crushed peanuts