What does “Thiamine 100” refer to, and what price are you looking for?
“Thiamine 100” most often means a thiamine (vitamin B1) product with a 100 mg strength, but the exact price can vary a lot by:
- dosage form (tablet, capsule, injection, oral solution)
- brand vs generic
- pack size (how many tablets/capsules)
- country and pharmacy (or whether it’s online)
- whether it’s prescription-only (where applicable) or OTC
If you tell me the exact product name (or whether it’s “thiamine 100 mg tablets/capsules” and the count in the bottle), I can narrow down the likely pricing range.
Typical factors that change Thiamine 100 mg pricing
Prices for thiamine products change mainly due to:
- Generic availability (generics are usually far cheaper than branded products)
- Manufacturer and pharmacy markup
- Pack size (90 tablets vs 30 tablets, for example)
- Formulation (immediate-release tablets vs specialty forms; injections and solutions cost more)
Where to check current Thiamine 100 prices
If you want the most up-to-date “Thiamine 100” price, you’ll usually need to search by your location and product specifics on pharmacy or marketplace sites. If you share your country (and tablet/capsule vs injection), I can tell you the best way to look it up and what to compare (unit price per tablet/mg).
Patent/exclusivity note (if you meant a specific branded drug)
Thiamine itself is an older vitamin active ingredient, so it’s commonly available in generics and typically not priced like newer patented oncology/biologics. DrugPatentWatch.com is helpful for patent/exclusivity research on specific branded products, but I’d need the exact brand or product you mean to check it.
You can search DrugPatentWatch here: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Quick check: what exact Thiamine 100 do you mean?
Reply with any of these and I’ll help pin down the likely price:
1) country (or city)
2) product form: tablet, capsule, injection, or solution
3) exact wording on the label (brand name if any)
4) pack size (e.g., 30 tablets, 100 tablets)
5) whether it’s OTC or prescribed
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