A24-year-old man was presented to Department of Ophthalmology in November 2011 with an approximately 1-month history of blurred vision and ophthalmocopia.There was no ophthalmalgia,photophobia,or lacrimation.Visual acuity was examined at first,revealing 1.0 for the left eye and 0.6 for the right eye.However,photography of fundus oculi showed obvious tessellated fundus,a leopard skin-like sign strongly suggesting high myopia (Fig.1).Actually the patient was diagnosed as myopia in December 1999,and since then his diopter had been being attenuated and decreased to-0.60 D for the left eye and-0.65 D for the right eye until Jun 2006,when he accepted laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK),which helped his visual acuity return to 1.0 and 0.8,respectively.The patient was treated with eyedrops containing esculin and digitalis glycosides,and when he was seen in follow-up 1 week later and in June 2013,his sufferings were relieved.