Age-related deteriorations in skeletal muscle are multifactorial in nature, which contributes to the high failure rates of drugs designed to target sarcopenia. Thus, there is a strong need for new therapeutic agents that express multidimensional effects in order to provide physically frail elders a chance to restore their health and QoL [21]. Given the scarcity of human trials using bee products among physically frail and sarcopenic subjects, cell culture and animal studies may provide useful information about the effect of bee products on skeletal muscle and help identifying their probable mechanism of action. Both in vivo and in vitro studies indicate that substances produced by honey bees such as royal jelly, bee pollen, and propolis can positively modulate basic cellular functions of myoblasts as well as mature myocytes. These products seem to be promising anti-sarcopenic agents because they can promote muscle protein synthesis [36,104], decrease mitochondrial oxidative stress [36,90,106], mitigate inflammation [38,90,101,108,115], improve muscular blood supply [102,110], enhance peripheral motor conduction [113], accelerate the removal of AGEs [38], counteract catabolism, and decrease markers of skeletal muscle atrophy [97,101,102,103].