Paper Title
DREAM SEMIOLOGY: EXPRESSION OF SOMATIC DAMAGE IN DREAMS, BASED ON A CASE STUDY

Abstract
Dreams have interested human beings since antiquity. Since then, however, it was not until the early 20th century that the theoretical beginnings of this field of research appeared. The main ones were Freudian dream theory and the pathophysiological approach of Vaschide and PiƩron. In this work, we'll continue to explore the question of dreams, based on the reading of a rather unusual case, that of a woman who, lying on her sofa in the middle of the day, dreams that a large snake is molesting her, and upon awakening finds that she is bleeding profusely. A few days later, gynaecological examinations revealed that she was suffering from the beginnings of cervical cancer and severe infectious metrorrhagia. The aim of this work is to establish the circumstantial link and formulate a relevant psycho-physio-pathological hypothesis, enabling us to understand the connection between Madame Antoinette's manifest content and the gynecological disorders she presents with. A psycho-physiological posture allows us to conclude with relevance that the correspondence between the physiological system actually affected and the physiological system affected in the dream is not a mere coincidence, and that the brain's choice to use the snake as a traumatogenic dream object is not fortuitous. The brain's choice of the snake as a traumatic dream object is not accidental, but a very specific and compelling way of making the person, in this case Madame Antoinette, aware of, or alerted to, the existence of a real danger, so that corrective measures can be taken. Keywords - Dream Semiology, Dream, Somatic Injury, Case Study