To be blunt: no. There was a study in the 1930s that showed that plant roots (specifically, pea roots) cut off from the plant and placed in a medium containing thiamine grew better than those in a medium without it. However, studies since then involving intact plants (and not severed parts of one) have shown no real difference when thiamine is administered. Unless you've actually cut off the roots when you were transplanting the tree, thiamine is not going to help. There are "rooting hormones" that you can get that will have an effect; thiamine is not one of them.
If it is due to polioencephalomalacia - thiamine or possibly vitamin A
I don’t know right now
A: Thiamine, or aneurine hydrochloride
without thiamine you get a brain disease
thiamine is an organic molecule and it is a vitamin
Cyanide is poisonous, thiamine is not. Thiamine is a "greener" catalyst.
no thiamin is suppose to help your nerves
my brother has to take this Thiamine HCL 100mg what is it taken for
Thiamine is available in oral, intramuscular injectable, and intravenous formulations. Injectable formulas are usually preserved for persons who are severely thiamine deficient.
When a patient has serious symptoms of thiamine deficiency, supplementation is usually started by giving thiamine through an IV or by intramuscular shots.
Thiamine deficiencies have no sex or racial predilection. Thiamine deficiency is more common in developing countries where poor nutrition occurs frequently.