After a Hair Transplant, Aarav Chose Maintenance
Traya Journey at a Glance
- Key problem: Aarav had hair fall for 4–5 years and was dealing with heavy dandruff even after getting a full scalp hair transplant about 4 months ago.
- Underlying root causes: The coach linked his ongoing hair concerns to nutrition, lifestyle, and dandruff-related scalp stress.
- Main products used: Anti-dandruff shampoo, anti-dandruff night lotion, scalp oil mixed with a booster, and a daily oral supplement (as advised on the call).
- Timeline shared: First month focused on dandruff control and internal health; hair fall control expected in about 4–6 months, with an emphasis on maintenance post-transplant.
- Outcome focus: Not a regrowth promise (because transplant was already done), but a steady plan to support scalp health, control dandruff, and maintain the current set.
“I got a hair transplant,” Aarav said early in the call, almost like he was making sure it was on record before anything else.
It had been around “three-and-a-half to four months,” and it wasn’t just a small patch. He’d done the upper area, plus the hairline too. And yet, the anxiety hadn’t fully left. Because even after a transplant, you still have to live with your scalp every day - especially when dandruff is “zyada,” as he put it.
That’s when he reached Traya. Not for a miracle redo, but for something more realistic: a way to protect what he’d already invested in.
When the transplant isn’t the end of the story
Aarav, a working professional from central India, had been dealing with hair fall for “four-five years.” The transplant was a big step - one that many people take with hope that the chapter is closed.
But his next sentence revealed what was still bothering him: “Maintenance okay… and in this… dandruff is more.”
He’d been given post-transplant maintenance products by the clinic - tablets and minoxidil - but he used the minoxidil for only “about one-and-a-half months.” He couldn’t recall the percentage, but the bigger issue was that the routine didn’t stick, and the scalp concern remained.
What he needed now was not another drastic intervention. He needed a plan he could actually follow.
What the coach noticed: maintenance needs a different promise
Khushboo, his Traya hair coach, didn’t oversell. She said it clearly: since the transplant had already been done, she wouldn’t give a regrowth assurance for transplanted areas. Traya’s role here would be maintenance - keeping the scalp healthy and controlling dandruff so the environment stays supportive.
That clarity matters, because it changes the emotional tone of treatment. Instead of chasing a guarantee, Aarav could focus on what was in his control: consistency.
Root causes they connected to Aarav’s ongoing hair concerns
On the call, the coach explained that the “root cause” behind continuing issues can sit in three everyday buckets: nutrition, lifestyle, and dandruff.
Dandruff is not just an annoying cosmetic problem. When it becomes heavy, it often brings itching, irritation, and scalp discomfort - conditions that can disturb scalp health and make hair feel weaker or fall more easily. That’s why this story fits what so many people search online as dandruff and dry scalp hair loss: the scalp becomes the battleground long before the hair looks better.
At the same time, internal health was positioned as part of the foundation - because even the best routine struggles if the body isn’t supported from within. That’s why the plan included daily oral support alongside topical dandruff control, forming a personalized hair treatment plan Aarav could build into his week.
- Q: Does dandruff really contribute to hair fall?
Yes - when dandruff is heavy, it can lead to itching and scalp irritation. That constant scalp stress can weaken the overall scalp environment, which is why controlling dandruff is often a key first step before expecting better hair stability.
“Lotion ko kab tak use karna hai?”: the moment of real vulnerability
Aarav’s most important question wasn’t dramatic. It was practical: “Ma’am, lotion ko kab tak, kab use karna hai?”
That’s the kind of question people ask when they want to do it right but feel overwhelmed by routines. And the coach responded in a way that made it feel doable - simple frequency, clear timing, and a repeatable pattern.
The routine that turned confusion into structure
Instead of vague instructions, Khushboo mapped Aarav’s week with specifics:
He was advised to use the Anti-dandruff Night Lotion three times a week, applied gently over the scalp and kept overnight. The next morning, the routine shifted to oiling: Scalp Oil mixed once with the booster, applied for about thirty minutes, twice a week, and then washed off.
For cleansing, the Anti-dandruff Shampoo was also recommended three times a week, especially after oiling. And for days when someone feels the need to shampoo more often, the coach suggested choosing a gentle, frequent-use option like Traya’s Defence Shampoo (a sulphate- and paraben-free mild cleanser, as per the product guidance).
To support internal nourishment, he was guided to take the daily oral supplement consistently - two after breakfast and two after dinner - making it part of his everyday rhythm rather than a “when I remember” add-on.
Why these products fit Aarav’s immediate needs
Aarav’s plan focused on dandruff control and scalp maintenance, which matched what he asked for.
Traya’s Anti-dandruff Shampoo contains Ketoconazole IP 2%, a clinically used antifungal ingredient for dandruff management, aimed at maintaining scalp health and reducing the dandruff-driven itch-and-flake cycle.
The Anti-dandruff Night Lotion also contains Ketoconazole IP 2% w/v and is designed for stubborn, heavy dandruff that tends to cling to the scalp - exactly the concern Aarav flagged as “zyada.”
For scalp nourishment, the Scalp Oil is positioned to help maintain scalp health and stimulate hair follicles through regular massage (Shiroabhyanga), which also supports blood circulation to the follicles - helpful when your goal is to protect and maintain post-procedure results.
The timeline that kept expectations realistic
The coach didn’t promise instant change. She gave Aarav a time horizon:
In the first month, the focus would be dandruff control and internal health improvement. Then, over four to six months, the goal would be hair fall control and hair quality improvement - along with maintaining the current hairline and set.
Importantly, she repeated the key boundary: post-transplant, the commitment is maintenance, not guaranteed new growth in transplanted areas. That honesty often becomes the very thing that builds trust.
Resolution: a follow-up, not a farewell
By the end of the call, Aarav sounded steadier. He confirmed he understood the routine, and then asked one more practical thing: how to contact support directly.
Khushboo explained the callback option on the same number and booked a follow-up call in fifteen days to track progress. It wasn’t framed like a one-time purchase - it was framed like a monitored journey.
For someone who’d already taken a major step with a transplant, this was the next kind of support: not hype, but structure, scalp care, and someone checking in.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- Can Traya help after a hair transplant, even without regrowth assurance?
- Does heavy dandruff affect scalp health and hair stability?
- What is a realistic timeline to see dandruff control and hair fall control with a routine?
- How do I follow a personalized hair treatment plan without feeling overwhelmed?

































