"I am so thankful for what you did."
It's very nice of you to say that, thank you.
I also should add that although this is mysterious, it is most likely much better than having a cancer or a severe lung infection. I hope that makes you feel a little better.
"In one day"
To me, that seems less like the antibiotic effect, and more like an antihistamine effect.
This is all guesswork, but all we have at this point is trying to figure out the probabilities.
I hope you are not having too much trouble translating :) These are complicated medical topics. Please ask for any additional explanations if it's not clear enough.
Let me talk a bit about two conditions that can cause granulomas in the lungs. I don't think you have either of these particular 2 diseases, but knowing about them might help in understanding.
Tuberculosis is caused by a bacteria. When the body is not able to kill off the bacteria, it instead surrounds them with immune cells. It's like building a wall to surround the infection. That is what granulomas are.
In Sarcoidosis, there is no bacteria (or virus or parasite or fungus). But the granulomas form anyway. No one knows why. It is a mystery immune condition.
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Let's add one more example: IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome). It is inflammation of the digestive tract, but no one really knows what causes it. However, people can try to detect what 'triggers' it, such as certain foods. Eliminating the foods can bring improvement. It's almost like an allergy, but different.
"I don't have any pain in my stomach from about one year."
That's certainly a welcome thing. The 3 days of severe pain must have been horrible for you.
But it's a mystery why it stopped, and also why it occurred only several months apart. Do you have any intuition about what caused it, or why it stopped? Sometimes an observant person can have an idea, and be correct.
"Augmentin, zithromax, ciprobay and histamed"
How soon did the improvement begin? In one day, or several days?
Well, I'm very happy to try to help. Maybe we can at least understand this better.
I'm guessing that if there had been a lung bacterial infection, it wouldn't have come back in only one week after the course of Abx had been done.
What you have is likely going to turn out to be rare. Maybe a rare disease. Or else a rare version of a not-so-rare disease - an 'atypical presentation'.
Histamine in the lungs can cause inflammation there. I'd ask the doc if it's okay to try a powerful antihistamine alone to see if that helps. Or maybe try an anti-leukotriene drug, since 'leukotrienes' are powerful immune chemicals that can cause inflammation in the lungs. (It may surprise you that frankincense is an effective anti-leukotriene.)