Rohan’s Hair Fall After Surgery: A Real Traya Journey
Traya Journey at a Glance
- The problem: Rohan noticed his hair fall had become “zyada” over the last year, especially after a leg fracture surgery with blood loss.
- What was really going on: A mix of recovery-related body stress, scalp dandruff concerns, and overall nutrition/metabolism support needs.
- What he used: Anti-Dandruff Night Lotion + Anti-dandruff Shampoo + Scalp Oil with Dandruff Therapy booster shot, along with Hair Ras and Hair Vitamin.
- The timeline he was guided to expect: First 3 months for dandruff and scalp maintenance, 4–6 months for hair fall control, and 7–8 months for regrowth and density.
- The shift: From confusion about “kitna din lagana hai” to following a clear, personalized hair treatment plan with coach check-ins.
“I got my head shaved so I could clean out the dandruff properly.”
That’s what Rohan, a working professional from Indore, said on his call with a Traya hair coach - half practical, half exhausted. His hair fall wasn’t new, but it had started feeling louder in the last year. Not just in the mirror, but in the way it made him second-guess every quick fix he tried.
For months, he’d relied on oils - “Adivasi oil” included - on and off. Nothing stuck long enough to feel like a plan. And then there was the bigger event he couldn’t ignore: a leg fracture surgery a couple of years ago, with a rod placement. In his words, “Blood loss hua… lagta hai usi wajah se hua.”
When hair fall stops being “normal”
Rohan described it simply: hair fall had been there “bahut pahale se,” but over the last one year it was clearly worse. The turning point wasn’t a new product or a big diagnosis - it was the realization that his usual approach wasn’t enough. He hadn’t seen a doctor for hair concerns, and he hadn’t used any structured treatment. Just intermittent oiling.
And when dandruff entered the picture, his response was extreme but honest: he shaved his scalp so he could “khich khich ke nikal” the dandruff and apply treatments better.
That’s often what hair loss does - it doesn’t just take hair. It takes patience. It pushes you into shortcuts.
The context behind his hair fall: recovery, gut history, and scalp health
Two details stood out in Rohan’s story.
First, the surgery. A major health event can leave the body feeling “not quite back,” and Rohan clearly connected his shedding to that phase. Second, he mentioned IBS that had “thoda come ho gaya,” with medicines that were now stopped.
On top of that, the routine scalp issue: dandruff. Even when someone says it’s “not too much,” the fact that Rohan felt the need to shave his head shows it was mentally taking space.
This is where the coach reframed the situation gently: hair fall doesn’t always come from one single reason. In Rohan’s case, it looked layered - recovery stress on the body, dandruff/scalp maintenance needs, and nourishment support from within. It’s also why the coach spoke about nutrition, metabolism, and dandruff together, and not as isolated problems - because the digestion and hair fall connection can show up indirectly when the body isn’t feeling balanced.
Q&A: Can dandruff lead to hair fall?
Yes - dandruff can affect scalp health and trigger itching and irritation. When the scalp stays inflamed or you keep scratching, hair can start shedding more easily. Clearing dandruff and maintaining the scalp environment is often the first step before focusing on regrowth.
The doubts he voiced (and why they mattered)
Rohan’s questions were practical, but underneath them was a familiar fear: “Will this actually work for me?”
He asked:
- “Kitna din lagana hai oil?”
- “One month mein khatam ho jayega dandruff, na?”
- “Vapas regrowth ho jayega? Kya aage ka jo nikal gaya hai?”
- “Minoxidil se aage aa sakta hai… front wala?”
These aren’t just usage questions. They’re reassurance-seeking. Especially the hairline question - because when the front starts thinning, it feels personal.
The coach didn’t overpromise. She explained that hairline regrowth can be difficult, but also shared that some customers do see improvement. Most importantly, she anchored Rohan to one realistic win: maintaining the hairline so it doesn’t recede further.
The turning point: a routine that finally felt doable
What changed the tone of the call was structure.
The coach broke the journey into phases and gave Rohan a timeline to hold on to:
- First 3 months: dandruff and scalp maintenance
- Months 4–6: hair fall control and follicle support
- Months 7–8: regrowth and density, with baby hair visibility starting around the eighth month
For someone who hoped dandruff would end in a month, this was a reset - gentle, but firm. Results take time. Consistency matters.
Then came the most underrated part: making it fit real life. Rohan even asked what to do if he bathes in the evening. The coach clarified that the Anti-dandruff Night Lotion is meant for night use and should be washed off the next morning with the Anti-dandruff Shampoo.
And she offered simple behavior cues: keep topicals near the bed or dressing table, supplements near the dining table, and if you miss a dose, don’t quit - continue the next day.
What he was advised to use (and why)
Rohan had already started using his kit. The coach simply made the “how” crystal clear and connected it back to outcomes.
He was guided on:
- Anti-Dandruff Night Lotion: applied 3 nights a week, left overnight (built to reduce dandruff using Ketoconazole 2% w/v; enriched with Aloe Vera & Vitamin E as per product details).
- Anti-dandruff Shampoo: used 3 times a week, especially the morning after lotion nights (Ketoconazole IP 2% to reduce dandruff and maintain scalp health).
- Scalp Oil + Dandruff Therapy booster shot: mix the booster into the oil bottle, apply twice a week, 30 minutes before shampoo days (supports scalp health and stimulates hair follicles; not recommended in scalp folliculitis as per product guidance).
He also clarified something important on his own: he had ordered Hair Ras and Hair Vitamin already. The coach aligned his routine:
- Hair Ras: 2 tablets after breakfast and 2 after dinner (supports internal nourishment; helps balance pitta and improves blood circulation to hair follicles as per formulation benefits).
- Hair Vitamin: 1 capsule after breakfast (supports nutritional deficiencies and includes natural DHT blockers like pumpkin seed extract, along with vitamins/minerals; not to be consumed with alcohol as per product note).
Given his surgery-related “blood loss” worry, it’s easy to see why people search for hair fall due to anemia solutions. While Rohan wasn’t diagnosed on the call, his instinct - linking health events and shedding - was valid, and the plan focused on scalp + nourishment support rather than shortcuts.
Resolution: not an overnight fix, but a trackable path
Rohan didn’t end the call with a dramatic “problem solved.” He ended it with something more useful: clarity.
He had a routine, an eight-month horizon, and a coach-led follow-up scheduled in 10–12 days. He knew what to apply, when to wash, how to mix the oil booster, and why dandruff care comes first before switching to minoxidil later, once the scalp is under control.
For someone who started with “bas oil lagaya tha… continue nahin rakh sakta tha,” that’s the real transformation: from scattered attempts to a system he can repeat.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- Can hair fall increase after a major surgery or health change?
- Does dandruff and dry scalp hair loss happen even if you think dandruff is “not that much”?
- How long does a personalized hair treatment plan take to show visible improvements?
- When should you focus on dandruff control before considering minoxidil for regrowth?

































