The purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of a mixture of apatite-wollastonite containing glass ceramic (A-W.GC, 42-60 mesh in granule size) with fibrin as a bone defect filler. A bone defect was drilled in the proximal metaphysis of the rat tibia and was filled with (1) fibrin glue, (2) A-W.GC granules, or (3) A-W.GC-fibrin mixture. Nothing was placed in the defect of the controls. The animals were serially sacrificed until 8 weeks after the operation, and the defect site was histologically examined and histomorphometrically analyzed for quantitative evaluation of newly formed bone and blood vessels. The use of fibrin glue as the binder markedly increased the ease of handling the A-W.GC granules. In the controls, little trabecular regeneration was observed in the defect site. Early vascularization (confirmed by microangiography) increased and the repairing process was accelerated in the defects filled with fibrin. In these defects filled with A-W.GC granules, good bone formation was observed around the granules. Bone formation was accelerated in the defects filled with A-W.GC fibrin mixture. Thus, the mixture showed good osteoconductive potential as well as acceleration of the repair process. Therefore, A-W.GC-fibrin mixture is considered to be a useful bone defect filler.