Chagas' disease is an endemic clinical entity caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a parasite that is transmitted to humans by the hematophagic Triatominae insects. It affects several million persons in Latin America, mostly in Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, and Bolivia. Megacolon, the most common complication of intestinal trypanosomiasis, results in severe constipation, for which surgery is indicated. A variety of procedures have been proposed for the correction of this disabling condition including sigmoidectomy, abdominal rectosigmoidectomy, left colectomy, and subtotal colectomy. On long-term follow-up, however, these operations have proved to be inadequate in a significant number of cases, apparently due to preservation of the dyskinetic rectum which continues to act as a functional obstacle to the progression of the fecal bolus. On the other hand, pull-through operations, which include the removal of all or almost all of the dyskinetic rectum, or the exclusion of the rectum, as in the Duhamel-Haddad operation, have been demonstrated to be superior. The abdominoperineal endoanal pull-through resection with delayed colorectal anastomosis and the Duhamel-Haddad operation are the most accepted procedures in Brazil and other Latin American countries; their technical details are illustrated. Functional results are satisfactory. Anal continence is normal in the vast majority of cases and sexual disturbances are rare. Routine treatment of 2 main complications--fecaloma and volvulus of the sigmoid colon--are discussed.