The authors report a series of 217 non-neoplastic stenoses of the upper airways operated in the period 1978-1991. One hundred and twenty patients with tracheal stenoses underwent tracheal resection and end-to-end anastomosis, with 117 excellent results and 3 deaths. The treatment of 97 patients with laryngotracheal stenoses was much more complex and difficult to manage: Fifty-nine underwent tracheal and subglottic resection-anastomosis with 58 successes and 1 death--Seven had resection-anastomosis with total cricoidectomy and stenting. They were 6 successes and 1 death--Three had supraglottic resection-anastomosis with 3 successes--Twelve underwent laryngeal enlargement over a T-tube with successes in 11 cases and failure in 1 case. Sixteen had complex combinations of resection and modeling with 13 successes, 2 failures, and 1 death. In this series under the same therapeutic options, the results were successful in 96% of cases, with 4% of failures (7% of them resulting in death). The anatomical type, tracheal or laryngotracheal, length of the stenosis, neuropsychological sequelae, and overall poor respiratory status of the patients must be taken into account before deciding the therapeutic strategy. Old age is not a contraindication to tracheal resection, but is certainly a risk factor for morbidity and mortality. The key to success is undoubtedly careful preoperative preparation, treatment of local infection and inflammation, as well as meticulous mucomucosal approximation of healthy margins at the anastomosis.