On 15th October 1744, the French surgeon Claude-Nicolas Le Cat (1700-1768) introduced a specially invented canula into the lateral ventricle of a newborn boy with hydrocephalus. The canula was used as a tap and was left in place for 5 days, until the death of the child. This procedure should be seen as the first documented description of a device for repeated ventricular taps in the treatment of hydrocephalus 1).
1)
Kompanje EJ, Delwel EJ. The first description of a device for repeated
external ventricular drainage in the treatment of congenital hydrocephalus,
invented in 1744 by Claude-Nicolas Le Cat. Pediatr Neurosurg. 2003
Jul;39(1):10-3. PubMed PMID: 12784070.