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Family Acanthaceae
Sapin-sapin
Ruellia blechum L.
GREEN SHRIMP PLANT / BROWNE'S BLECHUM

Sai shan lan

Scientific names Common names
Alvarezia parviflora Pav. ex Nees Bamburia (Ilk.)
Barleria pyramidalis Lam. ex Nees Dayang (Tag.)
Barleria pyramidata Lam. Karibusuk (Ilk.)
Blechum blechum (L.) Millsp. Kopis-kopis (Ilk.)
Blechum brownei Juss. Sapin-sapin (Tag.)
Blechum brownei Kunth. Tari-tari (Ilk.)
Blechum brownei f. albiflora Kuntze Blackweed (Engl.)
Blechum brownei f. coeruleum Kuntze Browne's blechum (Engl.)
Blechum brownei var. laxum Nees Green shrimp plant (Engl.)
Blechum brownei f. puberulum Leonard John bush (Engl.)
Blechum brownei var. subcordatum Kuntze  
Blechum haenkei Nees  
Blechum linnaei Nees  
Blechum linnaei var. laxum Nees  
Blechum linnaei var. nanum Nees  
Blechum linnaei var. parviflora Nees  
Blechum linnaei var. parviflorum Nees  
Blechum luzonium Nees  
Blechum pyramidatum (Lam.) Urb.  
Blechum trinitense Nees  
Dianthera eustachiana Hook. ex Nees  
Justicia carthagenensis Willd. ex Nees  
Justicia carthagenensis Nees & Mart.  
Justicia lupulina Lam.  
Justicia martinicensis Sieber ex Nees  
Ruellia blechum L.  
Ruellia bracteata Vahl ex Nees  
Ruellia gairae Rohr ex Nees  
Ruellia parviflora Sessé & Moc.  
Ruellia rohrii Vahl ex Nees  
Ruellia uliginosa Blanco  
Blechum pyramidatum (Lam.) Urb. is a synonym of Ruellia blechum.
Ruellia blechum L. is an accepted species. KEW: Plants of the World Online

Other vernacular names
CHINA: Sai shan lan.
CHUUK: Ererion, Fetinin namocels.
GUAM: Yerbas babui, Yetbas babney, Yetbas babui.
MAYAN: X akab xiu, Xaka xiu.
SPANISH: Yierba de la noche.
YAP: Gacel, malai, malai.

Gen info
- Ruellia is a genus of flowering plants commonly known as ruellias or wild petunias. However, they are not closely related to petunias (Petunia) although both genera belong to th same euasterid clade. (13)
- Formerly independent genera including Blechum, Eusiphon, and Ulleria are now considered synonymous with Ruellia.  (13)
- The genus name Ruellia honors Jean Ruelle (1474-1537) , herbalist and physician to Francis I of France and translator of several works of Dioscorides. (13)
- Ruellia blechum, the green shrimp plant or Browne's blechum, is a species of flowering plant in the family Acanthaceae. (3)
- Once popular as an ornamental, it has become invasive in places as far flung as Papua New Guinea.
(3)

Botany
• Sapin-sapin is an erect or ascending herb. Stems are often prostrate and rooting below, about 20 to 50 centimeters long and sparingly hairy or nearly smooth. Leaves are thin, ovate, 5 to 10 centimeters long, margins entire or nearly so, pointed at the tip, and widened at the base. Flowers are small, purple or white, and borne in spike-like, terminal inflorescences, occurring mostly in pairs, each pair subtended by a leaf-like, ovate, persistent, 1 to 1.5 centimeters long bract and two smaller brancteoles. Calyx is 4 to 5 millimeters long, hairy, slightly curved, and divided into 5 linear lobes. Corolla is tubular, hairy, slightly curved, about 1.3 centimeters long, and slightly exserted from the bracts. Capsule is ovoid, somewhat compressed and about 6 millimeters long.

• Herbs to 50 cm tall. Roots lacking tuberlike swellings. Stems slightly 4-angled, often prostrate and rooting at nodes, sparsely pubescent to subglabrous. Petiole 0.5-2.5 cm, strigose; leaf blade ovate, 3-6 × 2-4 cm, abaxially paler and subglabrous, adaxially green, sparsely strigose and densely pilose along veins, secondary veins 5-8 on each side of midvein, base obtuse to rounded and slightly decurrent onto petiole, margin entire, apex acute. Inflorescences terminal, dense spikes, 2-6 cm, subsessile to shortly pedunculate; rachis strigose; bracts subleaflike, ovate, ca. 1.5 × 1.3 cm, abaxially slightly pubescent, margin ciliate; bracteoles 2, lanceolate-ovate, 5-9 × 1.5-3 mm, margin ciliate. Calyx lobes linear to subulate, outside pilose. Corolla white to pale blue, ca. 1.5 cm (cleistogamous flowers sometimes present, these much smaller and budlike), outside puberulent on lobes; lobes ovate, ca. 3 × 2 mm. Stamens with longer pair ca. 4 mm and shorter pair ca. 3 mm; filaments glabrous; anther thecae ca. 1 mm. Ovary comose; style 6-10 mm, slightly hirsute; stigma usually with only 1 lobe evident. Capsule substipitate, ovoid to ellipsoid, ca. 6 mm, puberulent, 8-12-seeded; septa with attached retinacula separating from inner wall of mature capsule. Seeds ca. 1.5 mm in diam., margin with a conspicuous band of appressed hygroscopic trichomes. (Flora of China)

Distribution
- Introduced; naturalized.
- Common in waste places, in open thickets, on and about old walls, in and around towns at low altitudes throughout the Philippines.
- Native to the neotropics; also naturalized in Taiwan, Marianas, and Carolines.

Constituents
- Ethyl acetate fraction yielded five compounds: 1­-triacontanol (1), palmitic acid (2), stigmasterol (3), ligulariaphytin A (4), and stigmasterol­-D­-glycoside (5). (see study below) (4)

Properties
- Antiblennorrhagic, vulnerary.
- Studies have suggested antidiabetic, alpha-glucosidase inhibitory properties.

Parts used
Entire plant, leaves.

Uses

Folkloric
- Entire plant in decoction is used as an antiblenorrhagic.
- Pounded leaves used for wound healing.
- In Taiwan, leaves used to treat blenorrhea, intestinal parasites, wounds, vomiting with blood, flue and measles. (2)

- In Mexico, used for treatment of cancer and diabetes. (7) Plant decoction used for treatment of malaria and fever. (14) Decoction used for treatment of snakebites, fever and chills. (16)
- In a Panamanian inventory of medicinal plants used by Kuna, Ngöbe-Buglé, and Teribe indians, listed as antiemetic and antiamebiasis. (8)
- In Nicaragua, leaf and whole plant used in the treatment of snake bites. (9)
- In Mayan medicine, used for night sweats in children. Used for coughs, bleeding, chills, and fever. (10)
- In Jamaica, used for baths, sore feet, and colds. (11)
- In Sta. Lucia, plant is a constituent of a herbal tea, sangwi, given to stroke patients. (12)
- In Guam, douche prepared from mixture of Ruellia blechum, Cassiatora, coconut oil, water and any tea used for treatment of vaginal infection for treatment of vaginal infection. Douche preparation from leaves of R. blechum, E. hirta, P. amarus, P. guahava or given to women after giving birth. (15)
- In Costa Rica, plant decoction used for treatment of dysentery. In Cuba, used as diuretic. (16)

Studies
Non-Phytotoxic / Potential Antidiabetic / Alpha-Glucosidase Inhibition:
Study showed Blechum pyramidatum did not possess significant phytotoxic effect. The negative effects against coffee might be competition for water and nutrients. On further evaluation. the methanol fraction showed good inhibitory effect on alpha glucosidase suggesting a potential as an alternative in reducing blood sugar in patients with diabetes mellitus. (see constituents above) (4)
Yellow Vein Disease:
Study reports on a previously unidentified begomovirus associated with yellow vein disease in Blechum pyramidatum. The disease was observed causing begomovirus-like yellow/chlorotic leaf veins and shortened internodes of Browne's blechum plants on the island of Luzon, the incidence ranging from 1-% to 50% in fields in 2012. (5)
Adjuvant Extract for Use Against Diabetes and Related Diseases:
Study reports on a patent application for an invention of an herbal adjuvant intended for the treatment of diabetes and related diseases, based on Blechum pyramidatum aerial parts (leaves, bracts, flowers and fruits). (6)
• α-Glucosidase Inhibitory Activity: In Mexico, antidiabetic and anticancer preparations from this plant have been patented. This study sought to identify and characterize the glucosidase inhibitors from the species. Bioassay-guided fractionation of a crude extract isolated a main-glucosidase inhibitor, Palmitic acid (IC50 237.5), with an inhibitory activity similar to the antidiabetic drug Acarbose (IC50 241.6 µM) which was used as positive control. Kinetic analysis showed the palmitic acid as a competitive inhibitor, binding to the same site as acarbose in the human α-glucosidase. Study supports the antidiabetic use of the plant in traditional medicine. (7)

Availability
Wild-crafted.

© Godofredo U. Stuart Jr., M.D. / StuartXchange

Updated March 2025 / October 2018 / August 2016

PHOTOS / ILLUSTRATIONS
Photos © Godofredo Stuart / StuartXchange
OTHER IMAGE SOURCE: Blechum pyramidatum: Green Shrimp Plant / Jason Hollinger / CC BY 2.0 / Click on image or link to go to source page / Wikipedia
Additional Sources and Suggested Readings
(1)
Ruellia blechum / Synonyms / KEW: Plants of the World Online
(2)
Taiwanese Native Medicinal Plants / Phytopharmacology and Therapeutic Values / Thomas S.C. Li, Ph.D. / Taylor & Francis
(3)
Ruellia blechum / Wikipedia
(4)
EVALUATION OF PHYTOTOXIC ACTIVITY OF Blechum pyramidatum, A WEED OF PANAMANIAN COFFEE CROPS / Lilia Cherigo, Marcos Salazar and *Sergio Martínez-Luis / INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CURRENT RESEARCH, Vol. 7, Issue, 12, pp.24172-24176, December 2015
(5)
First Report of a Novel Begomovirus Associated with Yellow Vein Disease of Browne's Blechum (Blechum pyramidatum) / Wen-Shi Tsai, Su-Ling Shih, Li-mei Lee, Lawrence Kenyon /
Plant Disease, 98 (5): May 2014 / DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-10-13-1025-PDN
(6)
ADJUVANT EXTRACT FOR USE AGAINST DIABETES AND RELATED DISEASES
(PAT - WO2009104944)
/ MONTERO JACOME JULIO MONTERO JACOME, JULIO / Publ.of the Int.Appl. with Int.search report - World Intellectual Property Organization
(7)
α-Glucosidase Inhibitor Isolated from Blechum pyramidatum / Lilia Cherigo, Sergio Martinez-Luis / Natural Product Communications, April 2018; 13(4)
(8)
A Quarter Century of Pharmacognostic Research on Panamanian Flora: A Review / Catherina Caballero-George, Mahabir P Gupta / Planta Med, 2011; 77: pp 1189–1202

(9)
Medicinal Plants for the Treatment of Local Tissue Damage Induced by Snake Venoms: An Overview from Traditional Use to Pharmacological Evidence/ Juliana Félix-Silva, Arnóbio Antônio Silva-Junior,
Silvana Maria Zucolotto, and Matheus de Freitas Fernandes-Pedrosa / Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Volume 2017, Article ID 5748256 / DOI: 10.1155/2017/5748256
(10)
Maya Medicine: Traditional Healing in Yucatan / Marianna Appel Kunow / University of New Mexico Press
(11)

A Review of Medicinal Plant Research at the University of the West Indies, Jamaica, 1948–2001 / SA Mitchell, MH Ahmad / West Indian Med J, 2006; 55(4): pp 243-269
(12)
Ruellia blechum / Plants of Saint Lucia
(13)
Ruellia / Wikipedia
(14)
Plants for Malaria: Plant species occurring in northern Latin America used in the treatment of malaria and fevers / William Milliken
(15)
Ethnobotanical Review of Selected Medicinal Plants in Guam for the Treatment of Urinary Tract Ailments and Their Pharmacological Properties / Sahena Ferdosh / Scientia Pharmaceutica, Basel; 91(3): 43 /
DOI: 10.3390/scipharm91030043
(16)
Blechum pyramidatum / PROSEA

DOI: It is not uncommon for links on studies/sources to change. Copying and pasting the information on the search window or using the DOI (if available) will often redirect to the new link page. (Citing and Using a (DOI) Digital Object Identifier)

                                                            List of Understudied Philippine Medicinal Plants
                                          New plant names needed
The compilation now numbers over 1,500 medicinal plants. While I believe there are hundreds more that can be added to the collection, they are becoming more difficult to find. If you have a plant to suggest for inclusion, native or introduced, please email the info: scientific name (most helpful), local plant name (if known), any known folkloric medicinal use, and, if possible, a photo. Your help will be greatly appreciated.

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