Acute Exercise-Induced Epinephrine Elevation Promotes Post-Learning Memory Consolidation: A Narrative Review of Mechanisms and Implementation Strategies.
📄 Abstract
Memory function is susceptible to decline with age, stress, and neurological diseases, highlighting the importance of exploring effective and sustainable strategies to enhance memory consolidation. Epinephrine plays a key role in memory consolidation; acute, moderate elevations enhance memory, while chronic high levels are inhibitory. Given the limitations of pharmacological interventions, this study aims to investigate exercise as a non-pharmacological means to promote post-learning memory consolidation by inducing acute epinephrine release, focusing on its mechanisms and optimized implementation strategies. This narrative review systematically reviews evidence from neurophysiology, molecular biology, and behavioral experiments and finds that exercise can safely and controllably activate the sympathetic-adrenal system, leading to a rapid rise in epinephrine. The release kinetics align highly with the critical time window for memory consolidation. Moderate-intensity aerobic exercise implemented within 30 min post-learning can significantly improve memory retention. The mechanisms involve not only epinephrine enhancing synaptic plasticity and LTP by activating hippocampal β-adrenergic receptors, but also synergistic effects across multiple systems, such as promoting osteocalcin signaling, upregulating BDNF expression, inducing neurogenesis, and optimizing cerebral metabolism and blood flow. Evidence suggests that exercise, as a non-pharmacological intervention, significantly enhances post-learning memory consolidation through the precise modulation of epinephrine release and multi-system synergy, offering both high efficacy and safety. Future research should focus on developing precise exercise prescriptions based on individual characteristics and leveraging wearable devices and digital technologies to improve intervention adherence and applicability, promoting its widespread use in educational and clinical settings.