I'm assuming you meant "Kamehameha" instead of "Kamehasutra"!
However, from a practical standpoint:
Introduction
The Setup: Master Roshi, the perverted Turtle Hermit, discovers an ancient scroll buried under Kame House. The scroll is titled the "Kamehasutra." It claims to contain a training method stronger than the Super Saiyan form, but it requires "perfect marital synergy." Komik Dragon Ball Z Kamehasutra
If you are looking for a "paper" in an academic or analytical sense, you might be interested in how researchers study such fan works: Intercultural Media : Some scholars use Dragon Ball I'm assuming you meant "Kamehameha" instead of "Kamehasutra"
First, a direct definition is required. The term "Komik Dragon Ball Z Kamehasutra" (often stylized as DBZ Kamehasutra) does not refer to an official product released by Shueisha, Toei Animation, or Viz Media. Instead, it is a label applied to a specific sub-genre of Dōjinshi (self-published fan works) originating primarily from Japan, Indonesia, and Latin America in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The Kamehameha is a concentrated ball of energy