Overview of Findings:
Hybris Outbreak & Types of Infectious iGAPES Manifestations and Mutations
Report and case studies by Kasanagi, Mio
..:: Overview ::..
– Recently the United Nations Academy of Pathophysiologists has recently begun to research the infectious nature of a new pathogen from the sexually mutated women commonly known as the iGAPES. What follows are the notes collected thus far.
A new mutational strand has been recently discovered linked to the many evolved females known as the iGAPES. This new development has only appeared to us recently and this report it to bring the reader up to speed quickly on this alarming situation and the iGAPES as a whole.
Due to the effects caused by the mutation, many of the infected initially remained hidden amongst the population, unaware of the urgency of their condition. Over the past few generations of exposure, the evolutionary effects the iGAPES have become common amongst over 46% of all women globally. This outbreak has become common place and is no longer a stigma in the eyes of the public, adding to the ease of infectious transmission.
It has been popular with a small subset of the uninfected population to intentionally contract or develop an iGAPES mutation since the first cases were discovered. In recent decades voluntary contraction would require physical contact with a Hybris Egg or P.G.V. Current voluntary exposure can be accomplished through contact with the secretions or bodily fluids of an evolved iGAPES. Instances of voluntary exposure is yet limited, but is feared to grow unpredictably in the future. Therefore, given the unknown pathology of the mutations and its increasing popularity amongst fetishist thrill-seekers, thorough research is being conducted into this long-standing pathogen.